In order to make the fake university look real, Bethel began to explain that his best friend Sherman Slade helped him set up a fake school, which looked exactly like the real school on the Internet. In order to win the trust of Bethel's parents, he rented a long-abandoned mental hospital next to the famous Harmon College and renovated it to make it look like a real school. When his father insists on meeting the dean of the college, Bethel uses his friend Sherman Slade's uncle Ben Lois (played by Louise Bragg) as the dean. The seemingly perfect plan, but because of the design of the website-one-click admission, nearly 300 students who were rejected by other schools came to study.
Bethel knew that these students had no other university to go to, so he made them think that the fake university was a real university. After he secretly attended the well-known Harmon College, he asked students to set up their own courses and become teachers themselves. Students write down what they want to learn on a huge blackboard.
At the same time, Richard Van Fenn (played by anthony heald), Dean of Harmon College, began to plan to expand the campus of Harmon College. He sent Hoy Ambrose (played by Travis von Vic) to get rid of these old buildings that were originally planned for the expansion of the new campus. One of the old buildings is the South Harmon Institute of Technology, which was converted from the old hospital in Bethel. When Bethel refused to negotiate with Hoy, Hoy tried to reveal the secret of the new school.
Later, because Slade was beaten, he told Hoey the truth about the fake school, and Hoey coerced him to hand over all the information about the fake school. Hoy also specially invited all parents of students from South Harmon Technical College to attend the Parents' Day, and took the opportunity to tell these parents that South Harmon Technical College was a fake school.
It wasn't long before the college was forced to close, but because Sherman Slade sent a letter to Ohio when the fake school was running, this move gave Bethel an opportunity to record the fake college as a real college.
Under the hearing of officials from the Ohio Education Certification Agency, Bethel began to talk about the failure of traditional education and successfully persuaded officials to turn the fake college into a one-year experimental college. As a result, South Harmon Technical College reopened, and Bethel regained the recognition of her parents.