User:Bawolff/Edit COI Summary/10 per page (alphabetical)/12


Formal Request for Corrections: BLP, NPOV, and Weight Issues

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Stanigator (talk) 17:35, 30 January 2026 (UTC)

Regarding the recent revert by @Thenightaway:
I note that my corrections regarding the subject's business career (MovieSet/Fasken citations) were accepted, but the correction regarding the fiscal policy quote was reverted with the summary "revert COI account."
WP:BLP violations and factual errors must be corrected regardless of the editor's status. The current text in the article claims the subject called "tax revenue" a "Ponzi scheme." This is a demonstrable misrepresentation of the cited source.
The Evidence:
  • Article Text:"She has argued that increased tax revenue... is akin to a Ponzi scheme."
  • The Source (Daily Hive):"She takes issue with the municipal government being addicted to generating more housing as its revenue source... She likens the City’s financial business model as a 'Ponzi scheme'..." (Source: Daily Hive, Oct 14 2022).
The subject was critiquing a specific municipal business model (reliance on development fees/CACs for capital projects), not general taxation.
I am requesting that a neutral editor review the Daily Hive source and restore the correction to verify the text against the citation. Stanigator (talk) 02:43, 7 February 2026 (UTC)
Forgot to add the tag below.
{{request edit}}
Regarding the recent revert by @Thenightaway:
I note that my corrections regarding the subject's business career (MovieSet/Fasken citations) were accepted, but the correction regarding the fiscal policy quote was reverted with the summary "revert COI account."
WP:BLP violations and factual errors must be corrected regardless of the editor's status. The current text in the article claims the subject called "tax revenue" a "Ponzi scheme." This is a demonstrable misrepresentation of the cited source.
The Evidence:
  • Article Text:"She has argued that increased tax revenue... is akin to a Ponzi scheme."
  • The Source (Daily Hive):"She takes issue with the municipal government being addicted to generating more housing as its revenue source... She likens the City’s financial business model as a 'Ponzi scheme'..." (Source: Daily Hive, Oct 14 2022).
The subject was critiquing a specific municipal business model (reliance on development fees/CACs for capital projects), not general taxation.
I am requesting that a neutral editor review the Daily Hive source and restore the correction to verify the text against the citation.
Stanigator (talk) 02:44, 7 February 2026 (UTC)
Forgot to add the tag below.
Regarding the recent revert by @Thenightaway:
I note that my corrections regarding the subject's business career (MovieSet/Fasken citations) were accepted, but the correction regarding the fiscal policy quote was reverted with the summary "revert COI account."
WP:BLP violations and factual errors must be corrected regardless of the editor's status. The current text in the article claims the subject called "tax revenue" a "Ponzi scheme." This is a demonstrable misrepresentation of the cited source.
The Evidence:
  • Article Text:"She has argued that increased tax revenue... is akin to a Ponzi scheme."
  • The Source (Daily Hive):"She takes issue with the municipal government being addicted to generating more housing as its revenue source... She likens the City’s financial business model as a 'Ponzi scheme'..." (Source: Daily Hive, Oct 14 2022).
The subject was critiquing a specific municipal business model (reliance on development fees/CACs for capital projects), not general taxation.
I am requesting that a neutral editor review the Daily Hive source and restore the correction to verify the text against the citation.
Stanigator (talk) 02:48, 7 February 2026 (UTC)
Here from BLP/N. I reviewed this and removed the word "tax". Fences&Windows 00:41, 16 February 2026 (UTC)
This request seems to have been filled in February 2026. I am closing it. Fiske (talk) 18:39, 14 April 2026 (UTC)
Sorry, I'm actually behind in reviewing a draft to be filled in the sandbox for review. Please advise on next steps. Stanigator (talk) 18:47, 14 April 2026 (UTC)
I'm ready to move from my sandbox (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Stanigator/sandbox/Colleen_Hardwick) to the Drafts page in order to address the editorializing along with the missing items in the original article. If I don't hear back by the end of the week, I will go ahead and make the move. Stanigator (talk) 15:54, 28 April 2026 (UTC)
I wanted to correct the record, and I will wait until May 5, but I will make an edit request using the sandbox as the basis for the request. Stanigator (talk) 19:11, 1 May 2026 (UTC)
Error: Protected edit requests can only be made on the talk page.
Hi everyone. I’ve put together a proposed update for this article in my sandbox here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Stanigator/sandbox/Colleen_Hardwick
I am requesting an independent review to implement this because I have a Conflict of Interest (I have been in contact with the subject to verify some factual details and help secure the rights for her photo). Because of this COI, I want to follow the rules strictly and not overwrite the live article myself (and I don't want to invite another edit war).
Here are the main changes I have made in the draft.
- Adding the missing 2005 election results when the subject went by a different name prior to a divorce
- Adding missing, well-sourced context to her biography and political record (specifically regarding housing data and her final vote on the MST development) to ensure a more Neutral Point of View (NPOV) than what it is right now (there's a lot of editorializing that the quoted articles did not communicate).
I would really appreciate it if an experienced editor could take a look at the sandbox draft. If it meets community standards, please feel free to move it over to the live article. Happy to answer any questions about the sources used. Thanks! Stanigator (talk) 03:56, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
 Not done per WP:NEWLLM. I'm not wading through a mass of LLM slop. Deacon Vorbis (carbon  videos) 05:23, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
The article itself wasn't done with AI. Stanigator (talk) 05:36, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
The article is a promotional mess, and the wanton LLM use here and there doesn't inspire confidence that it wasn't used. There are sources attached to statements that don't even remotely back up those statements. This is not what Wikipedia is for. Deacon Vorbis (carbon  videos) 06:17, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
Should I delete/archive this thread and create a new one summarizing what was done in the sandbox? Stanigator (talk) 06:19, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
For others in this thread, Stanigator disclosed in the WP:DISCORD that they've had personal communication with Hardwick, but I suspect it goes beyond that. The draft rewrite of this article they've proposed reads overtly complimentary, like a resume. grapesurgeon (talk) 06:51, 3 May 2026 (UTC)


False implication regarding Indigenous-led development

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Hello everyone. I am Colleen Hardwick, the subject of this article. I want to respect Wikipedia's rules about conflict of interest, so I am not editing the article myself. I have put together missing details and factual corrections that I am hoping volunteer editors would be willing to review and add to the page for me.

The section about the MST Development Corporation's Heather Lands project is written in a way that implies I opposed an Indigenous-led project for inappropriate reasons. This is completely false and highly damaging to my reputation. I, as the city’s representative of Vancouver Heritage Commission, acted to protect heritage buildings before voting in favor of the project as the public record shows.

Colleen Hardwick (talk) 17:31, 6 June 2026 (UTC)

Reply 25-JUN-2026

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❎  Item removed  

  • I removed the phrase Hardwick questioned the suitably [sic] of the height of the buildings as this was not confirmed by the source and was ungrammatical.

Regards,  Spintendo  19:42, 25 June 2026 (UTC)


Section heading “Stance on Housing” is misleading

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The section heading implies that the paragraphs to follow deal with my views on housing, when they actually deal with my views on the effects of upzoning on affordability.

  • Proposed fix: Change “Stance on Housing” to “Stance on upzoning”
  • Sources: https://dailyhive.com/vancouver/colleen-hardwick-vancouver-housing-supply

Summary: Correction on the section heading "Stance on Housing" to reflect my actual views Colleen Hardwick (talk) 17:54, 21 June 2026 (UTC)

Reply 25-JUN-2026

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✅  Edit request implemented  

  • The heading was adjusted to account for both subjects.

Regards,  Spintendo  19:42, 25 June 2026 (UTC)


Editorializing that I argue "without evidence"

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The article currently states that I oppose increases in housing supply. This is false and consequently unsupported. It states I have argued "without evidence" that density exacerbates housing affordability. "Without evidence" is the editor and source writer’s personal opinion, not a neutral fact. My positions are heavily based on data, specifically the criticisms of upzoning inflating land values without the justifying data. I also made repeated requests and motions for data from the city to justify the land upzoning push.

In the news article cited, this statement precedes the Ponzi scheme quote and provides context: “In the process of encouraging more residential development to pay for growth, she believes the use of rezoning tools and density-catalyzing area plans by consecutive City Councils has greatly exacerbated Vancouver’s housing affordability crisis by pushing land values upwards.” That is what I believe and is a fair statement.

  • Proposed fix: Please remove the false statement that I oppose increases in housing supply. Replace it with “Hardwick opposes upzoning which inflates land value.” Please remove the subjective phrase "without evidence" so the sentence is neutral. If anything, this quote fully reflected what I said: “In the process of encouraging more residential development to pay for growth, she believes the use of rezoning tools and density-catalyzing area plans by consecutive City Councils has greatly exacerbated Vancouver’s housing affordability crisis by pushing land values upwards.”
  • Sources:

Colleen Hardwick (talk) 17:07, 26 June 2026 (UTC)


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  • What I think should be changed: In section 'Compare the Meerkat campaign' remove 'on November 18, 2023.' and changed to 'in 2022'.
  • Why it should be changed: As it stands, date is uncited and incorrect, suggest either removing date or changing to 2022.
  • References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button):

Ehjefferson (talk) 10:59, 23 February 2023 (UTC)

References

 Done Removed the date since it's unsourced. ― Blaze WolfTalkBlaze Wolf#6545 18:08, 2 March 2023 (UTC)


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  • What I think should be changed (include citations):

After this sentence in History - "In September 2017, it was announced the company was under investigation by the competition regulator surrounding allegations regarding most favoured nation clauses with home insurance providers." add "Initially, the investigation ruled against Comparethemarket. However, this was overturned on appeal in August 2022.[1]"

And in Controversy, after existing paragraphs add: "However, BGL filed an appeal in February 2021 and, in August 2022, a Competition Appeal Tribunal found in favour of BGL, overturning the CMA’s decision and its fine.

A Comparethemarket spokesperson commented: “We fully support the work the CMA does as vital to protecting the integrity of markets. We are pleased that this matter is now concluded and are, of course, happy with the outcome. We look forward to continuing our work to help people save money at a time when we are needed more than ever.”[2]"


  • Why it should be changed: As it stands page is inaccurate as only includes details of the original court case and not the outcome of the appeal.
  • References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button):

[3]

[4]

Ehjefferson (talk) 11:00, 23 February 2023 (UTC)

 Not done: Please cite secondary sources and avoid interviews. Reference 1 is reliable, but not secondary; source 2 is a direct quote and not independent in this regard. Best regards, -- Johannes (Talk) (Contribs) (Articles) 19:10, 6 May 2023 (UTC)


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  • What I think should be changed: Add "CEO – Mark Bailie" to Infobox data
  • Why it should be changed: Standard information for company wikipedia pages
  • References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button):

[1] Ehjefferson (talk) 11:00, 23 February 2023 (UTC)

References

 Done Johannes (Talk) (Contribs) (Articles) 19:11, 6 May 2023 (UTC)


What I think should be changed: style for Compare the Market

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Comparethemarket.com is used in the main heading. Comparethemarket is used in the first line of the first paragraph, first line under the Comparison products sub-heading, and in three places under the Controversy sub-heading. This should be changed throughout to Compare the Market as this is the correct style for the company. Refs: https://www.insurancetimes.co.uk/news/compare-the-market-boss-gives-update-on-motor-insurance-taskforce/1456821.article https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2026/01/25/city-dinosaurs-driving-innovators-abroad-compare-the-market/ StickyContent (talk) 14:20, 10 February 2026 (UTC)

Reply 22-MAY-2026

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❎  Edit request resolved  

  • Since this went to WP:RM#CM, the request is moot. Setting the request template to "answered".  Spintendo  20:55, 22 May 2026 (UTC)


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What I think should be changed

Replace ‘Finance and insurance’ with ‘Price comparison’ in the Industry section of the info box

Add Douw Steyn to founders section in info box 1

Add ‘The company describes its purpose as ‘making great financial decision-making a breeze for everyone’ after the first paragraph 2

Add: ‘In the UK, Compare the Market works in partnership with charities National Numeracy and the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award.’ After the current paragraph. 3, 4

After this addition, add: ‘It is authorised and regulated for insurance distribution by the UK Financial Conduct Authority.’ 5

Add the following 2 paragraphs after current paragraph 5: In 2019, ‘simples’, the catchphrase associated with Compare the Market advertisements, was added to the Oxford English Dictionary. 6

In 2023, the company became principal sponsors of The Hundred cricket competition.7

Edit list of other products that can be switched to make it up to date. So after ‘that can be switched, a new sentence should read: ‘These include energy, broadband, and digital TV and mobile phone packages, as well as a range of financial products such as loans, credit cards, current accounts, savings and mortgages. 8,9

After this paragraph add: ‘As well as prices, Compare the Market customers can also compare key features, such as levels of cover, fees and service. The UK website also features comparison guides’ 10

After this paragraph add: ‘The company receives fees from providers when customers buy products after clicking through from its comparison results. 11

Refs

1 Comparethemarket founder worth £600m Insurance Times. Retrieved 27 February 2026

2 Our purpose Compare the Market. Retrieved 27 February 2026

3 Compare the Market: a new partnership National Numeracy. Retrieved 27 February 2026

4 Meet our corporate partners DofE. Retrieved 27 February 2026

5 Compare the Market Limited Financial Conduct Authority. Retrieved 27 February 2026

6 Simples, whatevs and Jedi added to Oxford English Dictionary BBC. Retrieved 27 February 2026

7 Our partners The Hundred. Retrieved 27 February

8 Comparethemarket moves into mobile market with new service The Money Pages. Retrieved 27 February 2026 Mobile phone deals Compare the Market Retrieved 27 February

9 Find an account that could grow your savings faster Compare the Market. Retrieved 27 February

10 How we operate at Compare the Market Compare the Market. Retrieved 27 February

11 How we operate at Compare the Market Compare the Market. Retrieved 27 February

Why it should be changed

These changes are necessary in order to keep the Compare the Market entry up to date, as well as to give a more complete picture of the company’s activities.


CKingsley1985 (talk) 12:15, 3 March 2026 (UTC)


Proposed addition on biologically constrained models of language

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Requested change: In the section "Cognition, discrimination, and learning", add the following as a new paragraph after the first paragraph:

Task-performing neural network models have been used in cognitive computational neuroscience to test hypotheses about how cognitive functions may be implemented in the brain.[1] In one biologically constrained recurrent model of the cerebellar circuit trained for next-word prediction, intermediate-layer activity was reported to separate subject, verb, and object roles; blocking the recurrent pathway reduced context-dependent prediction and the separation of syntactic categories.[2]

Reason: The section currently gives only general and older examples of computational modeling of higher cognition. The first sentence is supported by an independent review that is already cited elsewhere in the article. The affiliated primary paper is used only for one narrowly described model result. I welcome revisions to the wording or omission of the affiliated source if editors consider it to give the study undue weight.

Vetxsy (talk) 06:09, 10 July 2026 (UTC)


Requested Edits June 2026

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I have suggestions for improving this page. I have a WP:COI as an employee of Concord.

1. What I think should be changed:

Please replace the first sentence of the lead paragraph:

From:

Alchemy Copyrights, LLC,[3][4] doing business as Concord, is an independent American entertainment company.[5]

To:

Concord (incorporated as Alchemy Copyrights LLC) is an independent entertainment company, headquartered in Nashville, Tennessee.[6][7]

Why I think it should be changed:

The company is consistently referred to as “Concord” in secondary sources, Starting the lead sentence with “Concord” improves clarity and reflects common usage. I also replaced the citations in the existing first sentence, replacing a non-independent primary source, Apollo.com, an investor in the company, as well as a dead link.

2. What I think should be changed:

In the History section, in the “Concord Music Group (2004–2015)” subsection, please add a hatnote linking to the standalone article:

Why I think it should be changed:

This subsection summarizes the period when the company operated as a different entity, Concord Music Group, which is covered in greater detail in the standalone article. Adding a hatnote follows WP:SUMMARYSTYLE, since the section covers a distinct subject with its own page.

3. What I think should be changed:

In the History section, please change the name of the “Concord (2017–present)” subsection.

Change to:

“Concord Music (2017–2019)”

Why I think it should be changed:

The company stopped using the name Concord Music in 2019, verified by source 62 .

5. What I think should be changed:

In the History section, in the subsection that should now be named “Concord Music (2017–2019)” , please delete the first sentence of the fifth paragraph:

The name Concord Music remained in use until early 2019.[8]

Why I think it should be changed:

The information is redundant with the sentence that it (“By May 1, 2019, the company was rebranded as Concord.[9] “) and cites a primary source.

6. What I think should be changed:

In the History section, in the subsection that should now be named “Concord Music (2017–2019)”, please replace what should now be the first sentence of the fifth paragraph:

Change from:

By May 1, 2019, the company was restyled as Concord.[10]

Change to:

By May 1, 2019, the company was rebranded as Concord.[11]

Why I think it should be changed:

Rewritten to remove jargon/promo language.

7. What I think should be changed:

In the History section, in the subsection that should now be named “Concord Music (2017–2019)”, create a new subsection above the sentence “By May 1, 2019…” Here’s what it would look like with the sentence:

“Concord (2019 - present)”

By May 1, 2019, the company was rebranded as Concord.[12]

Why I think it should be changed:

Creating this subsection provides accurate delineation in the company’s history. I’ve changed “restyled” to “rebranded” for NPOV.

8. What I think should be changed:

In the History section, beneath the “Concord (2019 – present),” please add a new 15th paragraph:

In 2024, Concord agreed to acquire the Hipgnosis Songs Fund, a music catalog investment company for approximately $1.4 billion.[13] Concord was later outbid by the investment firm Blackstone, which acquired Hipgnosis for $1.6 billion.[14]

Why I think it should be changed:

The initial deal and subsequent outbidding was heavily covered in the press, making it a notable point in the company’s history.

Thanks for taking the time to review! Snoopywoodstock2 (talk) 17:22, 4 June 2026 (UTC)

@That Article Editing Guy: @Nattasorn2001: - letting you know about these as you’re the editors most recently active on the page. Thanks!


Independent secondary sources to improve referencing

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Disclosure: I am a connected/paid contributor (I am employed as Head of School). I am not editing the article directly. The article currently relies mainly on primary or affiliated sources. Below are independent, secondary sources, grouped by the claim they support, that editors may wish to use. Full citation templates are provided so they can be dropped straight in. I have tried to keep the suggested wording neutral; please reword as you see fit.

Founding and founder

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The school was founded in 2001 by Varnnee Chearavanont Ross, who has been the subject of independent profiles discussing the school's founding and its trilingual, IB-based educational philosophy.[15][16][17][18]

Ownership / background

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The school was established by a member of the Chearavanont family and is frequently cited in Thai business coverage of family-owned international schools.[19][20]

Facilities

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In December 2018 the school opened a sports complex, an event reported by several independent Thai outlets.[21][22]

Community / programmes

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Concordian students have taken part in externally-reported education and environmental activities.[23] A 20th-anniversary feature on the school also appeared in the Thai edition of HELLO! magazine.[24]

If the article does not already have a reference-list template at the bottom, the citations above will need `

  1. Kriegeskorte, Nikolaus; Douglas, Pamela K. (2018). "Cognitive computational neuroscience". Nature Neuroscience. 21 (9): 1148–1160. doi:10.1038/s41593-018-0210-5. PMC 6706072. PMID 30127428.
  2. Ohmae, Keiko; Ohmae, Shogo (2024). "Emergence of syntax and word prediction in an artificial neural circuit of the cerebellum". Nature Communications. 15 927. doi:10.1038/s41467-024-44801-6.
  3. "Alchemy Copyrights, LLC – Moody's assigns first-time B1 CFR to Alchemy Copyrights, LLC (Concord); rates new secured debt B1; outlook stable". Yahoo Finance. July 28, 2020.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  4. "In brief: Round Hill Music Royalty now owned by Alchemy Copyrights". AJ Bell. October 31, 2023.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  5. "Concord: Largest-Ever Music ABS Transaction". www.apollo.com. Retrieved May 1, 2025.
  6. "Alchemy Copyrights, LLC". Bloomberg. Retrieved 31 March 2026.
  7. Shabong, Yadarisa (18 April 2024). "Hipgnosis agrees sale to Concord in $1.4 bln music rights deal". Reuters. Retrieved 25 March 2026.
  8. "Craft Recordings Announces New Latin Music Office and Expands Staff". Concord. January 10, 2019.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  9. "Concord". Music Business Worldwide. January 26, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  10. "Concord". Music Business Worldwide. January 26, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  11. "Concord". Music Business Worldwide. January 26, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  12. "Concord". Music Business Worldwide. January 26, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  13. Aswad, Jem (18 April 2024). "Hipgnosis Songs Fund Agrees to $1.4 Billion Takeover by Concord". Variety. Retrieved 25 March 2026.
  14. "Blackstone beats Concord with $1.6 bln bid for Hipgnosis Songs". Reuters. 29 April 2024. Retrieved 25 March 2026.
  15. "วรรณี เจียรวนนท์ รอสส์ จากคนไม่ชอบโรงเรียน สู่การเป็นครูผู้เปิดโรงเรียน". The People (in Thai). 2020-05-11. Retrieved 2026-05-26.
  16. จันกิเสน, ถนัดกิจ (2020-01-20). "Future of Education: สี่ข้อสำคัญที่เด็กต้องเรียนรู้ ของ วรรณี เจียรวนนท์". The Standard (in Thai). Retrieved 2026-05-26.
  17. "คอนคอร์เดียน ใช้หัวใจสร้างเยาวชน ขับเคลื่อนความเปลี่ยนแปลงด้วยการเรียนรู้". The Practical (in Thai). 2022-09-16. Retrieved 2026-05-26.
  18. "อ.วรรณี เจียรวนนท์ รอสส์ จากนักธุรกิจสู่การก่อตั้งโรงเรียนนานาชาติคอนคอร์เดียน". Creative Talk Conference (in Thai). 2020-08-14. Retrieved 2026-05-26.
  19. "กลุ่มทุน-ทายาทเจ้าสัว ลงสนามชิงตลาดธุรกิจโรงเรียนนานาชาติ". Bangkok Biz News (in Thai). Retrieved 2026-05-26.
  20. "เปิด "13 ตระกูลดัง" เจ้าของโรงเรียนนานาชาติ เมืองไทย". Thairath (in Thai). 2024-10-21. Retrieved 2026-05-26.
  21. "'คอนคอร์เดียน' เปิด Sport Complex ส่งเสริมสุขภาพนักเรียน". Thansettakij (in Thai). 2018-12-02. Retrieved 2026-05-26.
  22. "'คอนคอร์เดียน' เปิดตัว Sport Complex หนุนนักเรียนสุขภาพดี". innwhy (in Thai). 2018-12-02. Retrieved 2026-05-26.
  23. "CPF puts on 'nature classroom' for students". Bangkok Post. Retrieved 2026-05-26.
  24. "20 ปี Concordian International School โรงเรียนที่เป็นเหมือนบ้านหลังที่สองของเด็ก". HELLO! Magazine Thailand (in Thai). Retrieved 2026-05-26.

` (or `

`) to render. Thank you for considering these.

Laurentgoetschmann (talk) 06:25, 26 May 2026 (UTC)


COI edit request: expansion of "Earthmoving" section

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Before submitting this request, I substantially expanded all the article (diff). I did not edit the Earthmoving section directly due to my conflict of interest with one of the companies mentioned — Bedrock Robotics. I am now asking an independent editor to review this proposed addition to the Earthmoving section – a balanced overview covering all major market players.

Proposed expanded text for Earthmoving
  • In 2008, Komatsu Limited deployed the FrontRunner Autonomous Haulage System (AHS) at the Gabriela Mistral copper mine operated by Codelco in Chile — the world's first commercial autonomous haulage deployment. Driverless dump trucks equipped with GPS, radar, and collision detection transported material without human operators.[1]
  • Between 2019 and 2021, Mortenson Construction and Black & Veatch were among the first construction contractors to deploy autonomous excavation technology on commercial projects, using systems developed by Built Robotics. Mortenson used the technology for wind turbine foundation excavation in Colorado. Black & Veatch deployed autonomous excavators on a solar energy project in Florida, digging 1,000 linear feet of trenches.[2]
  • In 2025, Sundt Construction carried out mass excavation at a 130-acre industrial site in Arizona: Caterpillar excavators equipped with retrofit kits developed by Bedrock Robotics — comprising LiDAR, cameras, and onboard computing systems — operated autonomously, moving over 65,000 cubic yards of earth and rock. [3] This was described as the industry's largest-known supervised autonomy deployment at the time.[4]

References

  1. "Komatsu FrontRunner hits milestone". Mining Magazine. 2018-11-23. Retrieved 2026-03-22.
  2. Liebeskind, Ken (2021-02-25). "Construction Jobs Accelerate With Autonomous Robot Use". Construction Equipment Guide. Retrieved 2026-03-22.
  3. "Bedrock Robotics Moves Earth with Autonomous Excavators". Engineering News-Record. 2025-12-15. Archived from the original on 2026-03-22. Retrieved 2026-03-22.
  4. Waldschmidt, Jordanne (2025-12-03). "Bedrock Robotics Deploys Industry's Largest Supervised Autonomous Excavator Test". Equipment World. Archived from the original on 2026-02-12. Retrieved 2026-03-22.
Wiki Markup (to copy + paste)

* In 2008, [[Komatsu Limited]] deployed the FrontRunner Autonomous Haulage System (AHS) at the Gabriela Mistral copper mine operated by [[Codelco]] in Chile — the world's first commercial autonomous haulage deployment. Driverless dump trucks equipped with GPS, radar, and collision detection transported material without human operators.<ref>{{Cite web |no-tracking=true|title=Komatsu FrontRunner hits milestone |url=https://www.miningmagazine.com/fleets/news/1351723/komatsu-frontrunner-hits-milestone |work=Mining Magazine |date=2018-11-23 |access-date=2026-03-22}}</ref>

* Between 2019 and 2021, [[Mortenson Construction]] and [[Black & Veatch]] were among the first construction contractors to deploy autonomous excavation technology on commercial projects, using systems developed by [[Built Robotics]]. Mortenson used the technology for wind turbine foundation excavation in Colorado. Black & Veatch deployed autonomous excavators on a solar energy project in Florida, digging 1,000 linear feet of trenches.<ref>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Liebeskind |first=Ken |title=Construction Jobs Accelerate With Autonomous Robot Use |url=https://www.constructionequipmentguide.com/construction-jobs-accelerate-with-autonomous-robot-use/51398 |work=Construction Equipment Guide |date=2021-02-25 |access-date=2026-03-22}}</ref>

* In 2025, Sundt Construction carried out mass excavation at a 130-acre industrial site in Arizona: [[Caterpillar Inc.|Caterpillar]] excavators equipped with retrofit kits developed by Bedrock Robotics — comprising LiDAR, cameras, and onboard computing systems — operated autonomously, moving over 65,000 cubic yards of earth and rock. <ref>{{Cite web |no-tracking=true|title=Bedrock Robotics Moves Earth with Autonomous Excavators |url=https://www.enr.com/articles/62211-bedrock-robotics-moves-earth-with-autonomous-excavators |work=Engineering News-Record |date=2025-12-15 |access-date=2026-03-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20260322091304/https://www.enr.com/articles/62211-bedrock-robotics-moves-earth-with-autonomous-excavators |archive-date=2026-03-22}}</ref> This was described as the industry's largest-known supervised autonomy deployment at the time.<ref>{{Cite web |no-tracking=true|last=Waldschmidt |first=Jordanne |title=Bedrock Robotics Deploys Industry's Largest Supervised Autonomous Excavator Test |url=https://www.equipmentworld.com/equipment-controls/autonomous/article/15772863/bedrock-robotics-leads-major-autonomous-excavation-push |work=Equipment World |date=2025-12-03 |access-date=2026-03-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20260212111317/https://www.equipmentworld.com/equipment-controls/autonomous/article/15772863/bedrock-robotics-leads-major-autonomous-excavation-push |archive-date=2026-02-12}}</ref>

Thank you for your time and consideration! Alexandra Goncharik -sms- 10:17, 22 March 2026 (UTC)

@Nirmaljoshi: Hello Nirmaljoshi, Would you have time to review an edit request above? You appear to be the creator this article and my fellow-participant in WikiProject Engineering, so I decided to ping you. I recently expanded the article substantially, restructuring all sections and adding sourced coverage of notable deployments.
Your original references to Japanese articles, books, and research sent me down an unexpected path: I ended up finding 1988 symposium proceedings describing the MARK robot, which was already finishing concrete floors autonomously in 1984 — the year I was born. Amazing! I tracked down the original PDF from the IAARC archive and added it to the article.
Thank you for laying the foundation! No pressure at all regarding my request. I just thought you might find it interesting. Alexandra Goncharik -sms- 10:42, 22 March 2026 (UTC)

  • Specific text to be added or removed: REPLACE EXISTING WITH:

Convent & Stuart Hall is an independent Catholic K-12 school in the city of San Francisco. The school was founded in 1887 by the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, also known as the Society of the Sacred Heart[1]. The school consists of four divisions: Convent of the Sacred Heart High School, Stuart Hall High School, Convent Elementary School, and Stuart Hall for Boys. The school also operates under the name of Schools of the Sacred Heart, San Francisco offering single-sex and coeducational classes. It is part of the Network of Sacred Heart Schools.


Request to update history section

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{{Edit COI|summary=Request to update history section}}

My name is Grace Nakazawa, and I work with Coulson Aviation as a marketing and communications consultant. I am ''thrilled'' to see that editors like [[User:AllegedlyAPhotographer|AllegedlyAPhotographer]] are trying to update this article! I thought I could help by providing some additional details about Coulson's history.

The current history section in this article is essentially a series of bullet points. To be honest, it's missing a lot of information, especially about Coulson's origin and international expansion. I put together a draft that provides a more encyclopedic-style summary.

{{collapse top|title=Updated history section}}

=== Early history ===

Coulson Aviation traces its origins to Coulson Forest Products Ltd, which was established in 1960 by Cliff Coulson.<ref name=DiTrapani>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Di Trapani |first=Antonio |date=March 13, 2025 |title=How This Company Became The 1st In The World To Operate A Unique Pair Of Boeing 737s |work=Simple Flying |publisher=Valnet Publishing Group

|url=https://simpleflying.com/company-1st-world-unique-boeing-737s/}}</ref> Coulson had served in [[World War II]], where he learned to operate [[tank|tanks]] and other heavy equipment.<ref name=Wise>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Wise |first=Jeff |date=August 5, 2021 |title=To Fight Wildfires, California Turns to a Family With a Fleet of $8,000-an-Hour Helicopters |work=Bloomberg

|url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2021-08-05/california-wildfire-coulson-aviation-s-night-flying-helicopters-bring-advantage}}</ref> After the war, he acquired a [[bulldozer]] and other equipment to support [[logging|logging operations]].<ref name=Wise/> Through Coulson Forest Products, he contracted for this equipment to be used by harvesters operating in [[British Columbia]].<ref name=Wise/> By 1978, the company had around 15 employees.<ref name=Wise/>

In 1982, Cliff Coulson suffered a stroke and his son, Wayne Coulson, took over leadership of the company.<ref name=Wise/> In 1985, the company added aircraft to its logging equipment, initially focusing on heavy-lift helicopters.<ref name=DiTrapani/>

=== Transition to aviation ===

Coulson Aircrane Ltd. was founded in 1985 as the core aviation entity under the Coulson Group.<ref name=CCC>{{Cite web |no-tracking=true|title=Coulson: Global leaders in aerial firefighting |publisher=Canadian Commercial Corporation |date=June 2023

|url=https://www.ccc.ca/en/resources/coulson-customer-profile/}}</ref> Coulson Aircrane soon expanded into [[aerial firefighting]] with [[Helicopter|helicopters]] and large [[Fixed-wing aircraft|fixed-wing]] operations.<ref name=DiTrapani/><ref name=Wise/><ref name=Tharawat>{{Cite web |no-tracking=true|title=The Coulson Group: Unique by Design |publisher=Tharawat Magazine |date=May 9, 2019

|url=https://www.tharawat-magazine.com/online-magazine/coulson-group-unique-design/}}</ref> The aerial fleet also grew to support [[heli-logging]] operations in [[Alaska]].<ref name=Swartz>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Swartz |first=Kenneth I. |title=Multi Mission Operator |work=Skies |publisher=MHM Publishing |date=May 7, 2014

|url=https://skiesmag.com/news/multimissionoperator/}}</ref>

In 1989, Coulson launched Coulson Manufacturing, a lumber manufacturing facility in [[Port Alberni]] that produced siding and other wood products.<ref name=Kolenko>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Kolenko |first=Sean |title=Family business report: Vancouver Island forest products business rooted in family values |work=Business Intelligence for B.C. |publisher=Business in Vancouver |date=December 16, 2013

|url=https://www.biv.com/news/resources-agriculture/family-business-report-vancouver-island-forest-pro-8238463}}</ref> By the early 1990s, the facility had nearly 900 employees and operated around the clock.<ref name=EDC>{{Cite web |no-tracking=true|title=Coulson Aviation: Fighting wildfires from the air; managing risks on the ground |publisher=[[Export Development Canada]] |date=May 12, 2024

|url=https://www.edc.ca/en/success-stories/coulson-aviation-indo-pacific-expansion.html}}</ref><ref name=Tharawat/>

In 1990, Coulson Aviation USA was founded as a subsidiary of Coulson Aircrane to provide aerial fire suppression aircraft to the [[United States Forest Service]].<ref name=AP>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|title=Firefighting plane owned by Oregon company crashes in Australia; 3 Americans killed |work=The Associated Press |via=The Oregonian |date=January 23, 2020

|url=https://www.oregonlive.com/news/2020/01/firefighting-plane-from-oregon-crashes-in-australia-3-killed.html}}</ref><ref name=DiTrapani>  Aerial firefighting contracts with state and federal agencies proved to be a more stable source of revenue than timber operations.<ref name=Wise/><ref name=Tharawat/> Wayne Coulson soon sold the majority of the Coulson Group's businesses to focus on [[firefighting]].<ref name=EDC>{{Cite web |no-tracking=true|title=Coulson Aviation: Fighting wildfires from the air; managing risks on the ground |publisher=[[Export Development Canada]]

|url=https://www.edc.ca/en/success-stories/coulson-aviation-indo-pacific-expansion.html}}</ref> Many of the Coulson Group's logging helicopters were retrofitted for aerial fire suppression,<ref name=EDC/> though the company did continue some heli-logging and other non-fire operations, including [[offshore drilling]] rig support.<ref name=Swartz/>


=== Growth and international expansion  ===

In 2005, Coulson was contracted to provide aerial fire suppression support to Australia's [[National Aerial Firefighting Centre]]  and the state of [[Victoria_(state)|Victoria]].<ref name=Swartz/> Coulson Aviation Australia was founded in 2010 to support Coulson Aircrane's long-term operations in the country.<ref name=ATSB>{{Cite web |no-tracking=true|title=Collision with terrain involving Lockheed Martin EC-130Q, N134CG |publisher=Australian Transport Safety Board |date=August 29, 2022

|url=https://www.atsb.gov.au/sites/default/files/media/5781842/ao-2020-007-final.pdf

}}</ref>

In September 2019, Coulson signed an agreement with the Bolivian government to support aerial fire suppression efforts in the [[Amazon rainforest|Amazon]].<ref name=BCAC>{{Cite web |no-tracking=true|title=B.C. aviation company sends helicopters to fight fires in Amazon |publisher=British Columbia Aviation Council |date=September 5, 2019

|url=https://www.bcaviationcouncil.org/b-c-aviation-company-sends-helicopters-to-fight-fires-in-amazon/}}</ref> In February 2023, Coulson expanded its operations in [[South America]] through a contract to provide aerial firefighting support to Argentina’s [[Ministry_of_the_Environment_and_Sustainable_Development_(Argentina)|Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development]].<ref name=Wings>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|title=Coulson Aviation provides aerial firefighting support to Argentina |work=Wings |publisher=Annex Business Media |date=February 22, 2023

|url=https://www.wingsmagazine.com/coulson-aviation-provides-aerial-firefighting-support-to-argentina/}}</ref> In November of that same year, Coulson won a three-year contract with Chile’s [[National Forest Corporation|Corporación Nacional Forestal]] for aerial fire suppression support.<ref name=Hoey>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Hoey |first=Iain |title=Coulson Aviation expands aerial firefighting services in South America |work=International Fire & Safety Journal |publisher=Centurian Media |date=November 15, 2023

|url=https://internationalfireandsafetyjournal.com/coulson-aviation-expands-aerial-firefighting-services-in-south-america/}}</ref>

In 2007, Coulson acquired two of the remaining [[Martin JRM Mars]] planes when it purchased Flying Tankers Inc from TimberWest.<ref name=AF>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|title=Coulson’s Martin Mars Finds New Home With BC Aviation Museum |work=Aerial Fire |publisher=Marsayl Media |date=March 29, 2024

|url=https://aerialfiremag.com/2024/03/29/coulsons-martin-mars-finds-new-home-with-bc-aviation-museum/}}</ref> These massive planes had served as "water bombers" for decades, and Coulson continued to use them for wildfire suppression.<ref name=DiTrapani/><ref name=Swartz/>

In 2013, Coulson Aviation purchased an ex-military [[Lockheed C-130 Hercules|C-130 Hercules aircraft]] and modified it for aerial firefighting missions.<ref name=SanDiego>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|title=Ex-Navy plane being revamped to fight fires |work=The San Diego Union-Tribune |date=March 14, 2013 |url=https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/2013/03/14/ex-navy-plane-being-revamped-to-fight-fires/}}</ref> The revamped plane operated on a California wildfire in September of that year.<ref name=Swartz/> In 2019, Coulson won a contract from the [[United States Air Force|US Air Force]] to install the company's retardant delivery system on seven C-130 Hercules aircraft.<ref name=Airforce>{{Cite web |no-tracking=true|title=Coulson receives USAF contract for firefighting system on C-130H |work=Airforce Technology |publisher=GlobalData |date=November 28, 2019

|url=https://www.airforce-technology.com/news/coulson-usaf-firefighting-system/}}</ref> Coulson continued to acquire and modify its own C-130 Hercules aircraft, and by 2025 had obtained a fleet of ten.<ref name=Stock>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Stock |first=Jaryd |title=Coulson Aviation purchases New Zealand C-130 Hercules aircraft |work=Aviation Photography Digest |url=https://aviationphotodigest.com/31791-2/}}</ref><ref name=Stock>{{Cite web |no-tracking=true|title=Four RNZAF C-130H Hercules aircraft sold to US aerial firefighting company |publisher=New Zealand Defence Force |date=April 11, 2025

|url=https://www.nzdf.mil.nz/media-centre/news/four-rnzaf-c-130h-hercules-aircraft-sold-to-us-aerial-firefighting-company/}}</ref>

In May 2017, Coulson Aviation acquired six [[Boeing_737|Boeing 737-300s]] from [[Southwest Airlines]] and announced plans to convert them into 4,000-gallon “FireLiner” air tankers.<ref name=Nadalet>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Nadalet |first=Ivan |title=Coulson Aviation converts Southwest B737s into firefighters |work=ch-aviation |publisher=ch-aviation GmbH |date=May 25, 2017

|url=https://www.ch-aviation.com/news/56246-coulson-aviation-converts-southwest-b737s-into-firefighters}}</ref><ref name=Forrest>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Forrest |first=Ben |title=Coulson Aviation lands first Fireliner |work=Skies |publisher=MHM Publishing |date=May 29, 2017

|url=https://skiesmag.com/news/coulson-aviation-lands-first-fireliner/}}</ref> The first converted jet became operational in 2018 and was used to fight a wildfire in [[Australia]].<ref name=Memom>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Memon |first=Omar |title=Fireliner: 5 Fast Facts About The Boeing 737 Air Tanker |work=Simple Flying |publisher=Valnet Publishing Group |date=July 12, 2024 |url=https://simpleflying.com/boeing-737-fireliner-facts-list/}}</ref><ref name=BBC>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|title=Modified Boeing 737 used to fight wildfire for first time |work=BBC |date=November 22, 2018 |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-46312633}}</ref> The 737 FireLiner was part of the large air tanker fleet that was used extensively during the [[2019–20 Australian bushfire season|2019–20 "Black Summer" bushfire season]].<ref name=Mason2023>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Mason |first=Ryan |title=New South Wales Rural Fire Service – Setting the Stage |work=Aerial FIre |publisher=Marsayl Media |date=July 3, 2023 |url=https://aerialfiremag.com/2023/07/03/new-south-wales-rural-fire-service-setting-the-stage/}}</ref>

In 2018, Coulson Aviation began night aerial firefighting tests in Australia.<ref name=Gabbet>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Gabbet |first=Bill |title=Trial of dropping water on a wildfire at night begins in Australia |work=Wildfire Today |publisher=International Association of Wildland Fire |date=February 27, 2018

|url=https://wildfiretoday.com/trial-dropping-water-wildfire-night-begins-australia/}}</ref>

In 2019, Coulson Aviation began supporting firefighting operations in Chile through a partnership with PESCO, a Chilean equipment and machinery company.<ref name=Chile>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|title=Coulson Moves Firefighting Assets to Chile |work=Aerial Fire |publisher=Marsayl Media  |date=November 15, 2019 |url=https://aerialfiremag.com/2019/11/15/coulson-moves-firefighting-assets-to-chile/}}</ref> In November 2023, Coulson Aviation expanded its operations in the country through a three-year firefighting contract with Chile’s [[National_Forest_Corporation|Corporación Nacional Forestal]].<ref name=Mason>{{Cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Mason |first=Ryan |title=Coulson Aviation Awarded 3-yr Aerial Firefighting Contract with Chile for C-130 and Citation 550 |work=Aerial Fire  |publisher=Marsayl Media  |date=November 14, 2023

|url=https://aerialfiremag.com/2023/11/14/coulson-aviation-awarded-3-yr-aerial-firefighting-contract-with-chile-for-c-130-and-citation-550/}}</ref>

In 2020, Coulson Aviation won an aerial firefighting contract with the Indonesian National Board for Disaster Management, marking the company's expansion into the [[Asia-Pacific]] region.<ref name=Langfield>{{Cite web |no-tracking=true|title=Aerial firefighting in the Asia-Pacific region |last=Langfield |first=Mandy |work=AirMed&Rescue |publisher=Voyageur Publishing & Events |date=April 2021

|url=https://www.airmedandrescue.com/latest/long-read/aerial-firefighting-asia-pacific-region}}</ref>  

{{reflist-talk}}

{{collapse bottom}}

As you can see, I split the content into three subsections:

*''Early history''

**This subsection spans the period from the establishment of Coulson Forest Products in 1960 to Wayne Coulson's assumption of leadership of the company in the early 1980s.

*''Transition to aviation''

**This subsection covers the period from Coulson Aircrane's founding in 1985 to the founding of Coulson Aviation USA in 1990. This section includes a short paragraph about the Coulson Manufacturing lumber manufacturing facility in Port Alberni, which is not strictly necessary for this section but does serve to flesh out details about this period and contextualize references to the Coulson Group's historical operations outside of aviation.

*''Growth and international expansion''

**Per the title, this subsection covers the period from the early 2000s to the present day during which Coulson expanded its operations across the globe.

The core factual claims were largely pulled from media coverage, e.g. profile pieces about Coulson like [https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2021-08-05/california-wildfire-coulson-aviation-s-night-flying-helicopters-bring-advantage this one] from Bloomberg and [https://simpleflying.com/company-1st-world-unique-boeing-737s/ this one] from Simple Flying.

I'm posting all of this content to the talk page so that independent editors can review. I'm hoping what I put together is useful, because it took me a long time to research & write and then figure out how to share on Wikipedia.

I've also started to upload Coulson-related photos to Wikimedia Commons that might be helpful. I'll share those as soon as I can. GN Coulson (talk) 20:35, 21 May 2026 (UTC)

I haven't looked through most of this, and I'm not sure that I will end up reviewing it as I'm still inexperienced but I would like to inform you that Simple Flying as a source has been depreciated. See Wikipedia:SIMPLEFLYING for more information. - AllegedlyAPhotographer(talk) 20:40, 21 May 2026 (UTC)
Hi, super cool to see real public information officers here. I'll do my best to help out. Independentgeoscience (talk) 21:33, 21 May 2026 (UTC)


Revised request to update history section

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This is Grace Nakazawa again. Per my last post, I work with Coulson Aviation as a marketing and communications consultant.

I updated my proposed draft to replace the Simply Flying citations. I apologize, I was not aware that website could not be used.

As you can see, I split the content into three subsections:

  • Early history
    • This subsection spans the period from the establishment of Coulson Forest Products in 1960 to Wayne Coulson's assumption of leadership of the company in the early 1980s.
  • Transition to aviation
    • This subsection covers the period from Coulson Aircrane's founding in 1985 to the founding of Coulson Aviation USA in 1990. This section includes a short paragraph about the Coulson Manufacturing lumber manufacturing facility in Port Alberni, which is not strictly necessary for this section but does serve to flesh out details about this period and contextualize references to the Coulson Group's historical operations outside of aviation.
  • Growth and international expansion
    • Per the title, this subsection covers the period from the early 2000s to the present day during which Coulson expanded its operations across the globe.

Thank you again for reviewing this! GN Coulson (talk) 15:28, 22 May 2026 (UTC)

Checking to see if AllegedlyAPhotographer, Independentgeoscience, or any other editor active on this Talk page have had a chance to review this history request. I understand that editors might not want use everything I drafted, but there are passages here that directly address chronological gaps and sourcing issues in the current history section, especially the citation needed tag in the first paragraph. There's also no information in the existing history section about support for firefighting operations in Chile and other examples of international expansion that have been documented in media coverage. Please let me know if there's anything I can do to help improve content here. I think it would be amazing if editors were able to elevate this article to good article status! GN Coulson (talk) 15:32, 9 June 2026 (UTC)


Request to add Operations section

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This is Grace Nakazawa again. I'm hoping that editors would consider adding an Operations section to this article that provides a brief, encyclopedic summary of Coulson's business model, key products & services, geographic areas of operation, and other organizational details. Some of this information is currently scattered across the article in different sections but it would feel more encyclopedic (in my opinion) if it were consolidated and updated for accuracy. I see Operations sections like this in other Wikipedia articles about firefighting companies (e.g. Bridger Aerospace) and organizations (e.g. California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection).

I put together a draft of what this could look like:

Thank you again for reviewing this and please let me know if you have any questions. GN Coulson (talk) 22:28, 2 June 2026 (UTC)


Update of content needed throughout - basic information incorrect

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{{Connected contributor (paid)}} should only be used on talk pages.


I am disclosing that I am a global communications manager for Adtalem Global Education and I am suggesting some factual changes. The logo on the page is out of date. The opening summary about Adtalem includes incorrect company names or names that are out of date. The former names are also consistently incorrect listed under Subsidiaries and History (i.e., DeVry Brasil is Adtalem Educacional do Brasil, Chamberlin College of Nursing is Chamberlain University, missing Association of Certified Anti-Money Laundering Specialists,etc.) Please reference the biolerplate on our latest news release [1] for a complete list of our companies and for the most up-to-date logo - also attached here for use.[File:Adtalem logo RGB.jpg|thumb|Adtalem Global Education]

We are also no longer based in Downers Grove, Ill., but now in Chicago, Ill., since December 2017[2]

The DeVry Education Group subsidiaries subhead should be adjusted to say Adtalem Global Education subsidiaries, and the company names should be updated to reflect what is listed in our boilerplate [3].Cindy Comm Mgr (talk) 14:24, 20 April 2018 (UTC) -- adding this now per Help Desk instruction by @Arch dude:  Preceding unsigned comment added by Cindy Comm Mgr (talkcontribs) 15:59, 19 June 2018 (UTC)

References

? Clarification needed. COI edit requests must include complete and specific descriptions of the request, that is, specify what text should be removed and a verbatim copy of the text that should replace it, making sure to use the correct Wiki Markup and including all references placed using the <ref> citation or other such reference template. "Please change X" is not acceptable and will be rejected; the request must be of the form "Please change X to Y" If you require additional assistance making these changes, please let me or another editor know by describing here on the talk page in a reply message which type of assistance is needed. Or you may make a request at the COI noticeboard.  Spintendo  00:12, 20 June 2018 (UTC)


Draft article

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On behalf of Adtalem Global Education and as part of my work at Beutler Ink, I am submitting a series of COI edit requests in an attempt to improve this entry from a Wikipedia perspective. As evidenced by the two warning banners at the top of the article, which have flagged the presence of problematic sources and text for over a decade, this article is in much need of improvement. There are entirely unsourced paragraphs, some inaccurate and outdated details, and information that is more applicable to subsidiary entries. The article uses multiple press releases and multiple primary sources as citations. There are also instances in which the parent company and subsidiaries are conflated.

For these reasons, I have worked to draft an expanded and updated entry, which is focused on the subject and based on Wikipedia-appropriate sources. I will be submitting requests seeking to replace the current article's content appropriately bit by bit, but wanted to share the full draft for transparency.

Removal requests

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First, I'd like to propose the removal of select problematic content in an attempt to clean the slate:

  1. In the History section, please remove the following text, which is mostly unsourced and also focused on DeVry University, not Adtalem Global Education: Adtalem Global Education was a successor to two separate entities: DeVry Institutes and the Keller-Taylor Corporation, doing business as Keller Graduate School of Management. DeVry Technical Institute was acquired by the Bell & Howell company in 1966, and became part of its Education Group division. The school was renamed to DeVry Institute of Technology in 1968.[1] In 1984, the education division was renamed DeVry, Inc. ("Old DeVry"), and became publicly traded on the American Stock Exchange.
  2. In the same section, please remove the second paragraph, which is entirely unsourced: The Keller-Taylor Corporation was formed in 1973 by Dennis Keller and Ronald Taylor. Keller-Taylor was the holding company of CBA Institute in Chicago, which later became Keller Graduate School of Management. In 1987 Keller-Taylor acquired the DeVry Institutes from Bell & Howell and merged it with Keller Graduate School of Management. The holding company's name changed to DeVry, Inc.
  3. In the same section, please remove the following paragraph, which is not based on original journalistic reporting and is specific to Ross University School of Medicine (not Adtalem Global Education): In 2019, Adtalem partnered with Dillard University, Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science, Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University, and Tuskegee University to increase physician diversity and entered into the Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) Partnership Challenge, created by the Bipartisan Congressional HBCU Caucus, to increase diversity in key workforce sectors.[2]
  4. In the Controversies section, please remove the following sentence, which uses a citation that does not even mention Adtalem Global Education or any of its current or former subsidiaries in any capacity: The Department of Education decided to forgive $6 billion in debt to students who claimed they were misled by schools, including American University of the Caribbean and Ross University owned by Adtalem.[3]

References

  1. "About Us". DeVry Inc. Archived from the original on April 6, 2011.
  2. "Adtalem Arm Partners With Dillard, Boosts Physician Diversity". Yahoo Finance. Yahoo. 27 June 2019. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
  3. Nova, Annie (2022-06-23). "Education Department agrees to cancel $6 billion in debt for some 200,000 student loan borrowers". CNBC. Retrieved 2023-10-20.

I will be proposing text additions related to the company's origins and evolution, based on the draft I've shared above, but for now removing these pieces of text would help clear some confusion about the company's early history. I generally avoid editing the main space and ask editors to review and implement proposed changes on my behalf. Thanks in advance for any assistance, Inkian Jason (talk) 22:27, 11 August 2025 (UTC)

Done Encoded  Talk 💬 17:55, 29 September 2025 (UTC)
Thank you for reviewing this request. Inkian Jason (talk) 18:07, 29 September 2025 (UTC)

History: Origins

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Hi again! I had hoped to get some of the problematic text in the History section removed in the above request, but I'll go ahead and move forward with a proposal to improve the part of the section focused on Adtalem's origins.

Currently, the Adtalem Global Education entry has some information about the history of DeVry University, which is a former subsidiary of Adtalem. The text is confusing because it conflates Adtalem and DeVry University, despite there being a standalone entry for DeVry University. Some of the text is entirely unsourced. I've supplied replacement text further below.

First, here's a copy of the current section's first four paragraphs:

Generally speaking, this text is poorly sourced (the first two paragraphs are almost entirely unsourced, hence why I submitted a text removal request above). There is some appropriate information about acquisitions, but I will be submitting a draft section specifically focused on acquisitions and divestitures (and based on better sources) in the near future.

In terms of improving coverage of Adtalem's origins, I suggest replacing the red-colored text above with the following, which is based on reliable news sources and is specifically focused on DeVry Inc. / DeVry Education Group (not DeVry University):

Origins
DeVry Inc. was created in 1987 with the merger of DeVry Institute of Technology (DIT) and the Keller Graduate School of Management.[1] DIT was established in Chicago as the DeForest Training School in 1931 and was acquired by Bell & Howell in 1967. Keller was started by two DIT teachers in 1973; the company acquired DIT from Bell & Howell in 1987. DeVry Inc. went public in 1991,[2] moved to the New York Stock Exchange in 1995,[3] and became known as DeVry Education Group in 2013.[4] The company was previously based in Downers Grove, Illinois.[5]
In 2012, the company moved 150 jobs from its campus in Roscoe Village to a new office in Chicago's West Loop. The company had additional offices in Oak Brook, as of 2013.[4] In 2015, the company opened another office in the West Loop, after the city approved a $1 million subsidy for the company in the form of tax increment financing in 2012.[6]

References

  1. "About Us". DeVry Inc. Archived from the original on April 6, 2011.
  2. Strahler, Steven R. (December 5, 2017). "DeVry University's ownership changes". Crain's Chicago Business.
  3. Murphy, H. Lee (December 2, 1995). "Expansion-Minded DeVry Set Sights on Debut in NY Market". Crain's Chicago Business.
  4. 1 2 Yue, Lorene (November 6, 2013). "DeVry Inc. unveils new company name". Crain's Chicago Business. Crain Communications. OCLC 42883889. Retrieved 2025-06-02.
  5. "Parent of struggling DeVry University is changing its name to Adtalem". Tampa Bay Times. May 24, 2017 via Associated Press.
  6. Sachdev, Ameet (June 15, 2018). "DeVry lays off 90, will close Chicago office". Chicago Tribune.

I propose using this replacement text to create an Origins subsection of History. I intend to propose replacement text for Adtalem's later history separately. Reviewing editors can see the big picture of what I'm hoping to accomplish for this section at User:Inkian_Jason/Adtalem_Global_Education#History. I would like to think this is a clear improvement over the existing text, but I generally avoid editing the main space and seek help from other editors to review and update the article appropriately on my behalf. Again, my overall goal with this request is to improve sourcing and keep the content focused on the parent company Adtalem, not the former subsidiary DeVry University. I'm happy to address any questions and thanks for any assistance with reviewing the request and improving the article. Inkian Jason (talk) 17:27, 25 August 2025 (UTC)

Done Encoded  Talk 💬 17:57, 29 September 2025 (UTC)
Thanks again! Inkian Jason (talk) 18:07, 29 September 2025 (UTC)

Leadership

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I'd like to propose another text improvement and update focused on the company's executive leadership. Currently, the Infobox mentions Stephen Beard, but without any sources and with no confirmation in the article body. The History section briefly mentions the resignation of Daniel Hamburger and the appointment of Lisa Wardell, who is no longer the president and CEO. To bring this article more up to date, I suggest removing the following two sentences from the History section:

  • Daniel Hamburger resigned in 2016 as CEO of DeVry with a payout of 5.3 million dollars. Eight-year board member, Lisa Wardell was appointed president and CEO of DeVry Education Group.[1]

References

  1. "For-profit college company DeVry Education Group replaces CEO". washingtonpost.com. Retrieved September 21, 2016.

I propose replacing this sentence with the following standalone section:

This section is focused on current and former president/CEOs and board chairs, based on Wikipedia-appropriate sources. I've also included a claim about board composition I thought was noteworthy. I generally avoid editing articles directly, so I'm asking reviewing editors to update the article appropriately on my behalf. As always, I am happy to address any questions and concerns about this request. Thanks again! Inkian Jason (talk) 17:47, 25 August 2025 (UTC)

Done Encoded  Talk 💬 17:59, 29 September 2025 (UTC)
@Encoded Thank you for reviewing these requests. Your assistance is much appreciated. May I ask, did you mean to leave out the first paragraph here re: current CEO and board chair Stephen Beard? Inkian Jason (talk) 18:07, 29 September 2025 (UTC)
Apologies I did not mean to leave it out, thanks for flagging! Encoded  Talk 💬 18:09, 29 September 2025 (UTC)
@Encoded Thank you for taking another look! I appreciate your help and fast reply here. Inkian Jason (talk) 18:10, 29 September 2025 (UTC)

Acquisitions and divestitures

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Much thanks to User:Encoded for reviewing the above requests. Next, I'd like to focus on the second half of the History section, which is mostly about acquisitions and divestitures but based on press releases and Adtalem's website.

Specifically, the following claims are poorly sourced:

  • In December 2018, Adtalem completed transferral of DeVry University and Keller Graduate School of Management properties to Cogswell Education LLC.[1] This was completed just days after the transfer of Carrington College to San Joaquin Valley College.[2]
  • In September 2020, Adtalem Global Education Inc announced that it began the process of purchasing Walden University for US$1.48 billion in cash.[3] According to Higher Education Dive "Two investment firms, Engine Capital and Hawk Ridge Partners, wrote in an open letter...that they were "severely disappointed" with the board's decision to purchase Walden, calling the college a 'substantially inferior asset.'"[4]
  • In August 2021, Adtalem Global Education Inc completed its acquisition of Walden University.[5]
  • In 2022, Adtalem sold the Association of Certified Anti-Money Laundering Specialists, Becker Professional Education and OnCourse Learning to Wendel Group and Colibri Group, respectively.[6]

These are all press releases, with the exception of Higher Ed Dive, which I'm not sure editors would consider a reliable source (not to mention, it is used to source a claim about two non-notable companies). I propose removing these red-highlighted claims and replacing with the following an Acquisitions and divestitures section based on reputable journalistic sources. As seen in the draft I've shared previously, here's a copy of the proposed text for this section:

Acquisitions and divestitures

Adtalem acquired Becker CPA Review (now known as Becker Professional Education), which prepared students for the Certified Public Accountant exam, in 1996.[1] Adtalem acquired Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine in 2003,[2] Chamberlain University (then Deaconess School of Nursing) in 2005,[3] and American University of the Caribbean in 2011.[4][5] Adtalem agreed to purchase Walden University for approximately $1.5 billion in September 2020.[6][7] The agreement required approval by the U.S. Department of Education and the Higher Learning Commission.[8] When the deal closed in August 2021, Adtalem became the largest provider of graduate and undergraduate degrees in nursing.[9]

Adtalem began selling business units unrelated to healthcare education in 2017 and consolidated focus on the industry during 2019–2020, when there was a shortage of health professionals.[10] In 2018, the company sold Carrington College to San Joaquin Valley College,[11] as well as DeVry University to Cogswell Education.[12][13][14] In 2019, Kaplan, Inc. acquired Becker's healthcare test preparation assets. Kaplan also agreed to provide Adtalem with U.S. Medical Licensing Examination review programs to Ross University School of Medicine and American University of the Caribbean.[15] In 2022, Colibri Group acquired Becker and OnCourse Learning from Adtalem. Adtalem also sold the Association of Certified Anti-Money Laundering Specialists to the French investment company Wendel. The specific purchase terms were not disclosed, but Adtalem confirmed that its financial services segment, which included ACAMLS, Becker, and OnCourse, sold for $1 billion.[16] Since selling its financial services education business, Adtalem has focused primarily on healthcare education.[17]

References

  1. "DeVry Acquires CPA Training Firm". Chicago Tribune. June 20, 1996.
  2. Blumenstyk, Goldie (March 21, 2003). "DeVry Buys Offshore Medical and Veterinary School for $310-Million". The Chronicle of Higher Education.
  3. Jaschik, Scott (March 15, 2005). "DeVry Buys Nursing School". Inside Higher Ed.
  4. Yue, Lorene (November 6, 2013). "DeVry Inc. unveils new company name". Crain's Chicago Business. Crain Communications. OCLC 42883889. Retrieved 2025-06-02.
  5. "DeVry buys Caribbean medical school for $235M". Associated Press. August 4, 2011 via Bloomberg Businessweek.
  6. Miller, Ben; Milligan, Carley (September 11, 2020). "Adtalem buying Walden University for $1.48 billion". Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal.
  7. Wilen, Holden (November 13, 2020). "Laureate executives to get big payouts for sale of online university". Baltimore Business Journal.
  8. McKenzie, Lindsay (September 13, 2020). "Adtalem Wagers on Health-Care Education With Acquisition". Inside Higher Ed.
  9. Cherney, Elyssa (August 13, 2021). "The former DeVry switches CEOs mid-makeover". Crain's Chicago Business. Retrieved 2025-06-03.
  10. Norton, Kit (May 9, 2025). "How This Education Play Has Defied The Weak Stock Market And Soared To All-Time Highs". Investor's Business Daily.
  11. "San Joaquin Valley College, Inc. signs agreement to acquire Carrington College". San Joaquin Valley College. June 29, 2018.
  12. Strahler, Steven R. (December 5, 2017). "DeVry University's ownership changes". Crain's Chicago Business.
  13. "Handing Off DeVry". Inside Higher Ed. December 5, 2017.
  14. Javers, Eamon (January 30, 2024). "Fahmi Quadir, short seller nicknamed 'The Assassin,' takes aim at for-profit college giant Adtalem". CNBC.
  15. "Kaplan Buys Healthcare Test Prep Assets from Adtalem - EdSurge News". EdSurge. August 20, 2019.
  16. Barr, Diana (January 24, 2022). "St. Louis online education firm to expand with planned acquisition". St. Louis Business Journal.
  17. Asplund, Jon (June 21, 2023). "How Adtalem, the biggest health care educator in the U.S., plans to get even bigger". Crain's Chicago Business. Retrieved 2025-06-03.

This replacement text covers the same topics but is more complete and uses better sources. I don't think any of the claims are particularly contentious but given my conflict of interest I am asking other editors to review and update the article appropriately. Again, you can view how this text fits into the draft at large here. Thanks in advance to any editors who are able to help. Happy to address questions or concerns here or on my user Talk page. Inkian Jason (talk) 21:49, 29 September 2025 (UTC)

Done Encoded  Talk 💬 17:42, 21 December 2025 (UTC)
@Encoded: Thank you for reviewing this request and updating the article, Inkian Jason (talk) 15:51, 22 December 2025 (UTC)

History: Adtalem Global Education

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Related to the above request, I would like to continue addressing the article's History section. If all of the red-colored text in the above request were removed, then only the following text would be left of the second half of History:

  • In 2011, DeVry continued its international reach with the acquisition of ATC International (a subsidiary of Becker Professional Education), which provides professional finance and accounting training in Central and Eastern Europe as well as Central Asia; and American University of the Caribbean, a medical school located in St. Maarten.[1] In November 2013, DeVry Inc. was renamed DeVry Education Group.[2]

References

  1. "DeVry buys Caribbean medical school for $235M". Bloomberg Businessweek. August 4, 2011. Archived from the original on February 11, 2012.
  2. "Subscription Center". Chicagobusiness.com. 6 November 2013. Retrieved 19 May 2015.

The Business Week source indeed verifies the acquisition of American University of the Caribbean, but this is already mentioned in the proposed Acquisitions and divestitures section above. For this reason, I propose removal to avoid redundancy. The claim about the name change is accurate, and I've included it in the following proposed replacement text for the second half of the History section:

Adtalem Global Education

DeVry Education Group sold DeVry University and Keller Graduate School of Management in 2017, and became known as Adtalem Global Education that same year.[1][2] The company underwent a rebrand and the ticker symbol was changed to "ATGE".[3] Of the 225,000 students enrolled in its schools at the time, approximately half were based in Brazil and approximately one fifth were studying healthcare.[4] Inside Higher Ed said, "Even before the new name change, the company has sought to differentiate itself publicly from the rest of the for-profit sector. It has responded to increased regulatory scrutiny -- and negative headlines -- for the sector by announcing self-imposed reforms such as voluntarily limiting the amount of revenue it takes in from federal aid."[4]

The company's headquarters were later relocated from Downers Grove to 500 West Monroe Street in the West Loop Gate.[5] In 2024, Crain's Chicago Business said Adtalem had become "the largest health care educator in the nation during a post-COVID period in which the health care sector has faced severe labor shortages".[6] In November 2024, Adtalem announced plans to expand office capacity by moving to an 84,000-square-foot space in Willis Tower in early 2025.[5][6] In late 2024, Adtalem partnered with Hippocratic AI to train health care professionals on using artificial intelligence.[7] In 2025, Adtalem and Google Cloud partnered to develop a credentials program preparing students and healthcare workers to use artificial intelligence in the clinical environment, starting in 2026.[8]

References

  1. Strahler, Steven R. (December 5, 2017). "DeVry University's ownership changes". Crain's Chicago Business.
  2. "Parent of struggling DeVry University is changing its name to Adtalem". Tampa Bay Times. May 24, 2017 via Associated Press.
  3. Javers, Eamon (January 30, 2024). "Fahmi Quadir, short seller nicknamed 'The Assassin,' takes aim at for-profit college giant Adtalem". CNBC.
  4. 1 2 Kreighbaum, Andrew (May 2, 2017). "DeVry to Rebrand as Adtalem Global Education". Inside Higher Ed.
  5. 1 2 Ecker, Danny (November 13, 2024). "Adtalem expanding, moving HQ to Willis Tower". Crain's Chicago Business. Retrieved 2025-06-04.
  6. 1 2 Asplund, Jon (November 19, 2024). "Adtalem president and CEO adds chairman to his titles". Crain's Chicago Business.
  7. Galgani, Matthew (December 20, 2024). "This Google-Assisted AI Stock Targets Yet Another Breakout". Investor's Business Daily.
  8. "Adtalem, Google Cloud to launch AI credential program for healthcare professionals". Reuters. October 15, 2025.

My goal for this request is to expand and update the History section with information about the company as a whole outside of acquisitions and divestitures. You can see how I've organized text about Origins, Adtalem Global Education (post-name change), and Acquisitions and divestitures in the full draft I've published here, though I understand editors may decide to group details differently. Given my conflict of interest, I'm asking editors to review and implement the replacement text appropriately. Thanks in advance for any help and please let me know if you have any questions or concerns.

Inkian Jason (talk) 22:15, 29 September 2025 (UTC)

Done Encoded  Talk 💬 17:46, 21 December 2025 (UTC)
Thanks again for your help here, Inkian Jason (talk) 15:51, 22 December 2025 (UTC)

Campuses and enrollment

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For my next request, I'd like to propose adding a Campuses and enrollment section with an overview of Adtalem's campuses and enrollment figures (as a whole, not individual institutions). The following summary describes the number of campuses and locations, plus a few student body statistics, based on Wikipedia-appropriate sources:

Campuses and enrollment
Adtalem's institutions operated approximately 130 campuses globally in 2018. Twelve of the 90 U.S. campuses were located in Illinois.[1] In 2020, Adtalem's businesses operated 26 campuses in four countries and fifteen U.S. states. Approximately 90,000 students attended schools with a combined 6,100 faculty members. According to Adtalem, 34 percent of the students were Black. The company also claimed to be the largest provider of Master's, doctorate, and nursing degrees for African Americans.[2] As of 2021, approximately 82 percent of the 140,000 students enrolled at Adtalem schools learned via distance education.[3] In 2022, Adtalem operated 27 campuses and offered courses in 209 countries and territories.[4]

References

  1. Marotti, Ally (June 4, 2018). "Parent company of DeVry University changes its name". Chicago Tribune.
  2. McKenzie, Lindsay (September 13, 2020). "Adtalem Wagers on Health-Care Education With Acquisition". Inside Higher Ed.
  3. Cherney, Elyssa (August 13, 2021). "The former DeVry switches CEOs mid-makeover". Crain's Chicago Business. Retrieved 2025-06-03.
  4. Bojnansky, Erik (March 9, 2022). "Public company signs long-term lease at former USA Today printing press". South Florida Business Journal. Adtalem owns nine for-profit schools and companies and employs more than 10,000 people. It also has 27 operating campuses and a presence in 209 countries and territories.

This information is lacking in the current article. As always, I generally avoid editing directly and seek assistance from others to review and update the article appropriately. You can view how this section fits into the larger draft I've shared here, if helpful.

Thanks again, Inkian Jason (talk) 14:59, 21 October 2025 (UTC)

Done Folded into new "Operations" section for readability. Encoded  Talk 💬 17:50, 21 December 2025 (UTC)
Thanks for reviewing and updating the article, Inkian Jason (talk) 15:51, 22 December 2025 (UTC)

Finances

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Since this article is lacking information about the company's finances, I have drafted the following text for editor consideration, which is based on Wikipedia-appropriate sources:

Finances
In 2017, Adtalem lost approximately $4.6 million from the impacts of Hurricane Irma and Hurricane Maria.[1] The company made a profit of $95.6 million in 2019 and lost $85.8 million in 2020,[1] suffering from enrollment declines during the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] In early 2024, Adtalem was targeted by a short seller[3] and the company announced a $300 million repurchase program.[4] In late 2024, Investor's Business Daily said Adtalem saw an average sales growth of fourteen percent over the last three years.[5] For the 2024 fiscal year, Adtalem repurchased 5.446 million shares for approximately $261 million. In May 2025, the repurchase was completed and a new stock buyback program of up to $150 million through May 2028 was launched.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 Cherney, Elyssa (August 13, 2021). "The former DeVry switches CEOs mid-makeover". Crain's Chicago Business. Retrieved 2025-06-03.
  2. Asplund, Jon (June 21, 2023). "How Adtalem, the biggest health care educator in the U.S., plans to get even bigger". Crain's Chicago Business. Retrieved 2025-06-03.
  3. Reinicke, Carmen (January 30, 2024). "Short Seller Who Targeted Valeant Aims at Education Firm Adtalem". Bloomberg News.
  4. 1 2 Norton, Kit (May 9, 2025). "How This Education Play Has Defied The Weak Stock Market And Soared To All-Time Highs". Investor's Business Daily.
  5. Galgani, Matthew (December 20, 2024). "This Google-Assisted AI Stock Targets Yet Another Breakout". Investor's Business Daily.

Same as above, I'm seeking help from others to review and update the article appropriately. You can view how this section fits into the larger draft I've shared here, if helpful. Happy to address any questions or concerns.

Thanks! Inkian Jason (talk) 15:08, 21 October 2025 (UTC)

Done Folded into new "Operations" section for readability. Encoded  Talk 💬 17:50, 21 December 2025 (UTC)
Thanks again for your help here! Inkian Jason (talk) 15:51, 22 December 2025 (UTC)

Let's be careful with these COI edits

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I made some recent edits to the article to try to better reflect the history of the firm as I found it in the sources. I just now saw this draft article and am concerned. This firm was found to have harmed a large number of consumers, paid a very large settlement. It then renamed itself and shifted to a new sector of the industry. The details selected/left out in Inkian Jason's draft put the company in substantially better light than an article reflecting WP:RS weights on the firm's history. Chris vLS (talk) 16:45, 5 January 2026 (UTC)


Logo update

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Related to the above update, I have uploaded the company's new logo: File:Covista logo.jpg. I'm hoping someone can update the article's Infobox on my behalf, given my COI. @Maxime Vernier: Might you or another editor be willing to help with this time-sensitive request (since fair use images get deleted if not used)?

Thanks! Inkian Jason (talk) 20:10, 16 March 2026 (UTC)

 Done Maxime Vernier (talk) 20:31, 16 March 2026 (UTC)
@Maxime Vernier: Thank you! Inkian Jason (talk) 21:08, 16 March 2026 (UTC)


Introduction

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Continuing my series of requests for this article, which I am submitting on behalf of Covista, I'd like to turn focus to the first paragraph of the Introduction. Here's a copy of the current text:

I propose replacing this paragraph with the following, which describes the business as a healthcare education company (instead of a "US corporation") and as a parent company. Additionally, the proposed paragraph adds mention of independently notable businesses that previously operated under the parent. Proposed text:

You'll notice I've kept (and properly formatted) the already used Chicago Tribune citation, since the source confirms a Chicago headquarters and also says the company's recent name change reflects a "pivot toward health care education". The proposed replacement text also removes use of the company's official website.

If editors consider this an improvement, I'm hoping someone can update the article on my behalf. Thanks for your consideration, Inkian Jason (talk) 14:28, 27 March 2026 (UTC)


Infobox updates

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I'd like to submit another request for updating this article, specifically the Infobox:

  • Please add "Adtalem Global Education Inc." to the "Formerly" field
  • Please add "Health care" to the "Industry" field
    • Related to the above COI edit request, recently published sources verify a focus on this industry.
  • Please remove "1973; 53 years ago" from the "Founded" field
    • Reason: This is the founding date of Keller Graduate School of Management.
  • Please change "Stephen W. Beard (President and CEO)" to "Stephen Beard (Chair, CEO)" in the "Key people" field

If editors prefer to include a list of notable subsidiaries in the Infobox, then the following could be added:

I'll let editors decide what's most important to include in the Infobox, but I'd like to think all of these proposed changes are not contentious and consistent with the article body. Given my COI, I'm seeking help from others to review and implement this request appropriately. Thanks again! Inkian Jason (talk) 16:15, 27 March 2026 (UTC)

Based on User:Spintendo's feedback below, I'd like to clarify that Adtalem Global Education Inc. should be added to the "|former_name=" parameter. Inkian Jason (talk) 13:26, 26 May 2026 (UTC)
I would also like to clarify that the founding date in the infobox is for Keller Graduate School of Management, not Adtalem/Covista. The article's prose says, "DeVry Inc. was created in 1987 with the merger of DeVry Institute of Technology (DIT) and the Keller Graduate School of Management." I am trying to make the infobox consistent with the article body. Thanks, Inkian Jason (talk) 13:29, 26 May 2026 (UTC)


COI edit request: add sourced history of Goshen.net and ChristianShareware.net

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I would like to propose a sourced addition to the Crosswalk.com article concerning Crosswalk.com's 1999 acquisition of Wike Associates/Goshen.net and related GOSHEN resource sites.

Disclosure: I am Robert Woeger. I have a historical connection to the GOSHEN Christian Shareware Library / ChristianShareware.net ecosystem. The proposed article text below does not mention me. I am disclosing this connection and requesting review by uninvolved editors for neutrality, sourcing, and due weight.

Reason for request: The current article is very short and does not appear to include Crosswalk.com's acquisition of Wike Associates/Goshen.net, even though this acquisition is documented in The Washington Post and Christianity Today. Additional scholarly and archival sources show that Goshen.net and ChristianShareware.net were part of the documented Christian Internet resource environment of the late 1990s.

Suggested placement: Please add the following under a new or existing "History" section.

Proposed text:

In 1999, Crosswalk.com acquired Wike Associates Inc. of Roanoke, Virginia, a Christian publishing and direct-mail company that owned Goshen.net.[1] Goshen.net had been developed by Media Management as a website and email service primarily for Christian leaders and was later incorporated into Crosswalk.com.[2] Christianity Today reported that Media Management created Goshen.net as the Internet began to grow, offering information, links, and email bulletins to Christian leaders, and that the success of Goshen.net led Crosswalk to buy Wike's business in 1999.[3]

Goshen.net was also cited in academic and reference literature on Christian Internet use. A 1999 review in Electronic Resources Review described "Bible Study Tools on GOSHEN" as a free Media Management website containing Bible dictionaries, commentaries, concordances, lexicons, an interlinear Bible, sermon helps, historical Christian texts, creeds, confessions, catechisms, church histories, and a combined search engine.[4] Michael Jerome Laney's 1998 University of Tennessee dissertation on Christian website users used the Goshen Net Directory as the sampling frame for a survey of 912 respondents who visited Christian church websites listed in the directory.[5]

GOSHEN also operated ChristianShareware.net, a Christian software and file-download site. A 1999 archived capture identified it as the "GOSHEN Christian Shareware library site", stated that it was "owned and managed by GOSHEN", directed visitors to Goshen.net, and displayed Crosswalk.com copyright and branding.[6] ChristianShareware.net was later listed in Mohamed Taher's reference book Cyber Worship in Multifaith Perspectives, which surveyed religious and spiritual practice on the Internet.[7]

Thank you for reviewing this request. I welcome any trimming, rewording, or source evaluation by uninvolved editors.

References

  1. "Host Marriott Reports Profit Gain". The Washington Post. August 2, 1999. Retrieved June 10, 2026.
  2. "Business in Brief". The Washington Post. November 20, 2000. Retrieved June 10, 2026.
  3. Kellner, Mark A. (February 19, 2001). "Is God.com Dead?". Christianity Today. Retrieved June 10, 2026.
  4. Muller, Michelle (1999). "Bible Study Tools on GOSHEN". Electronic Resources Review. 3 (8): 92–93. doi:10.1108/err.1999.3.8.92.84. Retrieved June 10, 2026.
  5. Laney, Michael Jerome (August 1998). Mediated religion: motivations for religious web site usage: an exploratory study of Christian web site users (PhD thesis). University of Tennessee. Retrieved June 10, 2026.
  6. "Christian Shareware and Christian Freeware on GOSHEN". GOSHEN Christian Shareware Library. Archived from the original on October 5, 1999. Retrieved June 10, 2026.
  7. Taher, Mohamed (2006). Cyber Worship in Multifaith Perspectives. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-5257-0. Retrieved June 10, 2026.

RobertWoeger (talk) 08:40, 10 June 2026 (UTC)


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