I would suggest googling the school's name. There has been a lot of focus lately on for-profit schools and their practices and results. Some schools stand up fine under scrutiny and some have not. Some have been found to accept (sell to) students who really don't have the ability to succeed and graduate. Some spend an inordinate amount of money on advertising instead of instruction. And some have very low graduation and/or job placement percentages. Another reason this has gotten attention is that student loans given to people who don't graduate are at a higher risk of default.
So, if our government guarantees millions of dollars worth of loans to students who were sold into programs that they aren't qualified for, or into programs that don't lead to well-paying jobs, then the school profits pretty directly from large amounts of federal money. If this profit goes to really high CEO/presidents' pay and advertising and not into educating people, then that's a problem and our government is left holding the bag.
So, I would carefully research this specific school so you can be sure that what you are promoting is an ethical service for these potential students. Some schools that happen to be for profit, as I said earlier, have stood up fine to this scrutiny and are offering a great service to, sometimes untraditional students, and some have serious issues.
I attend a for-profit online graduate school right now and have done so for almost 8 years. Luckily, mine is one whose numbers look just fine, even better than traditional brick-and-mortar graduate schools.
Added: AND I think schools are required to make their numbers public. Their website should tell you what their graduation rates are, or their loan default rates, or the percentage of graduates who work in the field they were taught. These numbers should be available to the public.