Santa Barbara Business College : Santa Barbara
Santa Barbara Business College : Santa Barbara is a established in (unknown). The campus is located in and hosts students with an endowment of .
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California Aeronautical University
2 reviews
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Colleges & Universities, Flight Instruction
Open8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
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Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. Student housing available at CAU’s main campus in Kern County
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. Students eating at the on-campus dining facility, Skyway Cafe
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. CAU’s graduating class ready for their professional aviation careers
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. CAU’s main campus includes a recreation center with athletic courts and pool.
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. With near-perfect, flyable weather year-round, the main campus is conveniently centered
between Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. The California Aeronautical University fleet
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US.
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. The G1000 cockpit available to our students in the flight training degree programs
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. CAU student poses by the aircraft after she passes her commercial checkride
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. CAU student passes his multi-engine checkride
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. CAU’s main campus is an unparalleled purpose-built flight training facility at Bakersfield International Airport
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. CAU now offers an Aviation Maintenance Technology program. Learn more at calaero.edu
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. CAU student preparing to earn his instrument rating
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. Aviation Maintenance Technology students perfect their skills
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US. CAU student prepares for flight training on the University’s fleet of Cessna aircraft
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US.
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US.
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US.
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US.
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US.
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US.
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US.
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US.
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US.
Photo of California Aeronautical University – Bakersfield, CA, US.
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About the Business
Do you daydream about a future where you’re the one in the cockpit, flying across the world?
Maybe you have a knack for engines and love figuring out how they work. Or just maybe you get a
thrill at the idea of being involved in the business side of the aviation world. If any of these spark y…
COVID-19 updates
“California Aeronautical University has been proactive in educating students and staff in reference to healthy protective measures and will expend every effort to continue to do our part in the protection of public health and will follow appropriate guidance as necessary f…”
Read more
Posted on June 29, 2021
Location & Hours
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1450 Boughton Dr
Bakersfield, CA 93308
Mon
8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Tue
8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Wed
8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Open now
Thu
8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Fri
8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Sat
Closed
Sun
Closed
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Austin I.
CO, CO
01
11/24/2021
*Please do your own research as well. I am being 100% honest about my experience with CAU, along with things found calling lawyers and talking to former employees and students. However, as I learned from my dealings with CAU, be CAREFUL who you trust.
I lost 49k with only a private pilots license. They will up charge and upcharge your children. I reported them to the Veterans Affairs and CPPEA as they used up so much of my GI bill (which I earned after 3 deployments). I am beyond furious and have contacted numerous lawyers. They all told me that schools like this exist to only drain your money, and they know it. The contracts we sign going in prevent us from suing the university. I have never been screwed over more by any business in my life. I know multiple people who have filed complaints because of how horrid and inappropriate staff is. The parent company has also similar and nasty reviews about being lied and having their own staff complain about the school and president. The school is not even accredited anymore. Save yourself the money, time and sanity and go to another school that actually delivers accredited, transferrable courses. I left, and will forever lead the charge to expose this corruption.
Please see the below links to the character of the owner and the accreditation of the school: Please remember, SBCC was ran by M Johnston who is doing everything he can do distance CAU from there, however, the people he screwed over are not letting it happen.
The below 4 quotes are from: collegetimes.co/santa-ba…
“I worked for CAU, which is a subdivision of SBBC, for all of 3 months and hated it. The Pres. M. Johnson sits at the head due to nepotistic inheritance and cares only about the bottom line. They wanted me to sell (market) an overinflated aviation program using subversive and manipulative sales tactics by any means necessary to include compromising my own personal ethics-to which I resisted as much as I could.
This school is nothing more than a used car dealer selling you something you do not want or need.”
“Stay away. Worked there and this is a bad school. Upper management is a clueless son of the owner. He should never be in charge of a business much less of young people future. Maker yourself a favor: don’t work there and do not study there. Future of this school is bleak.”
Filing a federal lawsuit against them. Please email me with your stories. It will help to build a case and get al out money back. Christineatkinson@comcas…”
“SBBC is a complete scam. For over $30,000 you can get a AA degree and have no shot of paying off student loans. You will be in classes with people who did not graduate college, and your instructors are also low paid hacks. They charge over $1100 for 4 credits, yet they pay instructors only $18 per hour when other institutions pay double that. You pay to dollar for classes, SBBC low balls instructors and SBBC gets rich. The owner is a control freak who wants to put cameras into the classes to make sure students don’t have any food or drinks. STAY AWAY FROM THIS SCHOOL… MAJOR SCAM!”
glassdoor.com/Overview/W…
insidehighered.com/quick… (CAU was chose this shady accreditor, and chose to reinstate with this shady accreditor after it initially gained re-recognition under the Trump administration). Biden was elected and terminated this accreditor once more (in fact, it was one of the first things he did), as ACICS accredited a university that had 0 staff, and 0 students to defraud the Federal Government. Why did CAU return to this accreditor? Why would a school that “cared” so much about it’s students successes do this? It seems to me like my experience here, like so many others, is that the school is there to drain it’s students of money while M Johnston buys his kids planes.
The overwhelming majority of votes is completely negative. Please don’t take my word on it. Do some research yourself. This “University” needs to be dissolved and the M Johnston should stand trial whenever this all inevitably blows up in his face.
Also, to the Veterans Representative, how dare you willingly and openly assist in preying on Veterans! The last Vet Rep quit because of how insane the for profit business is, but you have the nerve to continue this scheme? I assume you’ve lost close friends and brothers in the military to suicide or combat. Would you tell them the same thing if they were still alive? Would you want this business to ruin them as well if they had survived? I hope you and M Johnston do some soul searching and realize this WILL not continue.
This school is nothing more than a used car dealer selling you something you do not want or need.
My two major concerns:living expense loan money is held until the 7th week of a 10 week term. This is money that the government holds against you the minute you request the loan, but SBBC won’t let you have it. This money should be released at the beginning of the term/quarter so that it can be used for school and living expenses. What good does it do the student to have to wait until the END of the term to get his/her own money? I am complaining to Federal Student Aid about this – it can’t be right. The other concern is that they do not follow any kind of structure as far as when a student takes what class. We are put in classes that require you know the internet, WORD or other computer programs long before we take the classes that teach those things. There are no prerequisites here. At present I am sitting in a class that is instructing me how to use Word and Excel and Power Point, and what passwords are and how to use the Internet and email. Gee – I’ve been doing all of that for 15+ years now, but yet I must answer review questions asking me what a password is and why it’s important. A class I do not need, want or that will benefit me – yet I am paying a lot of money to be forced to take it.
My advice: go to a reputable community college. Take the classes that YOU want to take for a lot less money. Your chances of getting a job will be the same as mine, but you will be smarter because you will have learned what YOU wanted to learn AND you won’t have paid $25,000-$30,000 or more for your two year education. These private schools like SBBC and Chapman surged during the recession, making the unemployed or underemployed promises of some grand future but all they really do is put you in massive debt. Stay away.
Pros:
Classes are convienient. If you live in Ventura, its nice because it’s close, and one of the few paralegal programs in the area. Night classes are also offered for full time students. I enjoyed the local factor of the school.
Class size. Small, under twenty, usually smaller. Awesome, compared to community colleges where there is not much of a one on one experience.
You don’t have to create your schedule. This made school easy because they factor in what classes you have taken and what you need into your schedule each term, so you don’t have to.
Teachers. The legal teachers (I don’t know much about the other departments) are great. Most were lawyers (we had one paralegal, good thing) that knew their stuff and had worked in the field, so when you asked questions you didn’t get too many “I don’t knows”. The instructors I had were especially good at giving us hands on real experience that we would use later. I also had one of the CJ teachers for interviewing and investigation, and he was very awesome.
Internship. This is in the middle of a pro and a con. They require a 170 hour internship as part of the program. Keep in mind if you have a full time job in another field that they will not waive this. But, for people who don’t have the experience, it’s great to have this. Firms are more inclined to take an intern as part of a school program than just on your own, and law firms usually want law firm experience for hiring on. Just don’t depend on the career and internship placement program to find your internship, because they just hand you a phonebook for the most part.
Fits California’s Business and profession code’s guidelines for paralegal education. After you complete the program, under an attorney if hired you can call yourself a paralegal because you possess the proper education.
Generally respected in Ventura County, but no where else knows what this school is. Which can be good and bad.
Cons:
Besides the legal courses, coursework is not challenging. General ed here is a JOKE, I hope you read this SBBC, it was pathetic. Thank god the legal instructors put it to the next level. Also, you have to take a class called PRD which teaches you how to write resumes, etc. This should be a test-out class for working professionals, it was a sleeping class for people who already knew how to have an interview and how to dress at a job. Also, since it’s vocational, don’t expect a well rounded education with history and science courses (good and bad).
No Westlaw/Lexis subscription. This is a must for the legal field, and is provided in other paralegal programs, we only got it for one term for research and writing. It would be great if they could give this to future students, because it is essential to be able to work with these databases after graduation.
Credits. Credits are not transferrable, except places that except nationally accreddited school’s credits. La Verne is one example, even though they won’t take all credits (great school), University of Phoenix (not so great) is another example. VC won’t have anything to do with it. I would only recommend doing 2 years here, not 4, because of this factor.
ABA Approvel: No ABA Approvel, though not required under California business and professions. This would be a plus though.
Staff. Staff, in general, is unprofessional. A few are really good, but some just crawl under my skin.
In the beginning, they told me things like, some people have gone onto law school from here, and things like that. If you are just starting, take this information very lightly because it is an exceptional case. ABA law schools will not accept a degree here, Ventura College of Law may, but under certain circumstances (probably taking the baby bar).
Schedule. The cons about the schedule are pretty significant. If you drop/fail a class, of course you have to retake it, but it could hold you back a significant amount of time depending on what class it is. Also, there is NO introductory Paralegal course, so you are automatically thrown into classes like probate, criminal, research, etc. Usually the instructors are good about accomadating you, but it would be much better if there was an intro course to give people a basis. I was so lost on some of the things for a while, I would have preferred this, and this is done in other schools.
Career placement: I don’t have first hand experience with this, but I have heard from other people they it is completely unhelpful. However, Ventura isn’t the best place to find great entry level legal jobs everywhere anyway.
Extra Curricular: No extra curricular activities. This would greatly benefit the school if there were more, and the students. Once in a while there is a pizza day, but I mean clubs, extra lecture opportunities, etc.
Overall, I would not change my decision to go here because I have learned and benefited from it, and have been fairly successful despite it, but I would warn others of the problems beforehand.
Anyway – I’m going to make the best of my education here and learn whatever I can. I do all of my assignments, I read everything I am given, and I am taking the responsibility for my education. I don’t know if I could recommend this college or not – the jury is still out on that. Teachers are very underpaid – but like I said, I do like the ones I’ve had so far. Good people don’t always make the best money. And I’ve made some great friends here, too – and that is also important to the whole “school experience”.