MyEdu

MyEdu is a private company founded in 2008 and headquartered in Austin, Texas, United States. MyEdu works by collecting data from college students, as well as official academic data from universities, to identify patterns that lead to unexpected costs.[1] MyEdu also provides interactive web applications to aid those seeking a college degree,[2] including services that focus on college decision making, such as degree planning & requirements, class schedules, courses, and professors. These services concentrate on helping students organize their academics.[3][4] MyEdu also offers a job platform for students to search for jobs and internships.

MyEdu Corporation
Type of businessPrivate
Type of site
SaaS - Software as a service
DaaS - Data as a service
HeadquartersAustin, Texas
Area servedUnited States
Founder(s)Michael Crosno
Chris Chilek
John Cunningham
IndustryEducation
URLwww.myedu.com
RegistrationRequired
LaunchedSpring 2008
Current statusNo Longer Exists

History

MyEdu was founded in 2008 by Michael Crosno, Chris Chilek and John Cunningham. The company, formerly known as Pick-A-Prof, officially changed its name to MyEdu in the summer of 2009. Acquired by Blackboard in January 2014.[5]

University of Texas connection

On October 18, 2011 the UT System announced a $10 million investment in MyEdu. It admitted the personal connection between MyEdu and the UT System. The co-founder of MyEdu, John Cunningham, is the son of William Cunningham, who is a former UT System chancellor, former UT-Austin president and current faculty member at the McCombs School of Business. William Cunningham has had a financial stake in MyEdu.[6][7]

The investment agreement designates MyEdu as "a UT System official" with permission to access student records.[8]

Critics have pointed out that the UT decision bypassed vetting by the university's investment advisers.[9]

gollark: Oh, the actual *processy* CGI?
gollark: Why?
gollark: I dislike the POSIX socket API utterly.
gollark: https://www.man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/socket.2.html is possibly maybe relevant?
gollark: Open a socket in what? C?

References

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