Michael K. Clifford is an American education investor and consultant, and a proponent of education.
Early life
Initially following his father's trade as a musician, Clifford converted to Christianity in his mid-twenties. Contacts made through faith-based non-profit organizations introduced him to John Sperling and Brian Mueller, and he moved into the field of online higher education.[1] Working as a fundraiser for faith-based organizations brought Clifford to the notice of Pat Robertson, and he co-managed Robertson's 1988 bid for the U.S. presidency.[1]
In 2007 Clifford co-founded American Way Education the owner of Los Angeles College International. In 2012, the college closed.[5]
In 2008, a Clifford entity paid $5.25 million to buy a Cleveland, Ohio college, Myers University, out of bankruptcy and Clifford renamed it Chancellor University.[6] During his tenure, at a full faculty and staff meeting, Clifford lauded the teaching of business courses and flat-out insulted liberal arts professors and their classes.[7] A former university administrator said that he viewed the school's leadership as "callous, anti-intellectual, insensitive ego-freaks." He added that "their quest for the Holy Grail of an on-line money fountain was ill-advised and obviously unsuccessful."[8]
Clifford bought a bible college in Memphis in 2009, named it Victory University, and installed former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee as chancellor. That school closed in 2014.[9]
In 2010, Clifford was profiled in the PBS documentary College Inc., which examined the effects of and failures surrounding the for-profit college industry.[2]
In 2013, Clifford created DreamDegree, an unaccredited online learning portal.[3] He founded Significant Systems, a consultancy firm for higher education institutions,[9] which later rebranded as SignificantFederation.[10]