The school was founded in 1976 by Alfred Calabro in Glendale, California, as a "no fat, no bull" correspondence school to meet the needs of working adults.[1] The university was housed in a Glendale office that also contained Calabro's law practice. Kensington awarded bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in a wide range of fields.[2] The Hawaii branch was started in 1996.[3]
As of 1976, Kensington was an "authorized" independent postsecondary institution in the state of California.[4] After the California Council for Private Postsecondary and Vocational Education was created in 1989 to regulate higher education institutions in the state, Kensington was required to obtain Council approval. In 1994, the Council's first review of the institution found deficiencies.[1][2] Following a protracted legal battle, Kensington University was ordered shut down by California authorities in 1996, no new degrees could be awarded, but prior degrees from the school would remain valid. The school was then re-opened by Anthony Calabro in Sep 1996[5] at Oʻahu, Hawaiʻi, where it was closed by court order in 2003.[3][6][7]
The school was founded in 1976 by Alfred Calabro in Glendale, California, as a "no fat, no bull" correspondence school to meet the needs of working adults.[1] The university was housed in a Glendale office that also contained Calabro's law practice. Kensington awarded bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in a wide range of fields.[2] The Hawaii branch was started in 1996.[3]
As of 1976, Kensington was an "authorized" independent postsecondary institution in the state of California.[4] After the California Council for Private Postsecondary and Vocational Education was created in 1989 to regulate higher education institutions in the state, Kensington was required to obtain Council approval. In 1994, the Council's first review of the institution found deficiencies.[1][2] Following a protracted legal battle, Kensington University was ordered shut down by California authorities in 1996, no new degrees could be awarded, but prior degrees from the school would remain valid. The school was then re-opened by Anthony Calabro in Sep 1996[5] at Oʻahu, Hawaiʻi, where it was closed by court order in 2003.[3][6][7]
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