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Brief Review of U.S. Accreditation
Institutional
• Regionals: NWACS, WASC (Jr., Sr.); SACS; HLC; MSACHE; NEASC
• National (primarily for profit) (ACCSCT); (ACICS); (DECT); ACCET; (COE); (NACCAS)
• National (religious): ATS; AARTS; TRACS
Specialized such as AMA, ABA, CACREP, NCATE, ACCSCB, etc. (70)
Recognition: USDOE, CHEA
Collaboratives: C-RAC, CRNAA, ASPA
NCHEMS Survey Findings on State Uses of Accreditation
6 states say they “Accredit” institutions, 14 “Approve,” 4 “Authorize, 3 “Certify,” 1 “Oversees,” 1 “Registers,” and the remainder “License”
30 states require private Not-for-Profit and For-Profit institutions to be accredited in order to operate; 16 do not require this; 4 require this only for Degree-Granting institutions
Varying rules on how long a candidate institution can operate while it seeks accreditation
Relationship Between Institutional Accreditation and Authorization
21 states require new Non-Public institutions to be accredited in order to be authorized, 11 more only to be Degree-Granting institutions
All but 6 States require Out-of-States to be accredited to operate in the state, but they sometimes require additional state agency review
Public institutions are authorized to operate by their Charters, but 24 states have additional regulations or statutes requiring them to be accredited (3 more for Community Colleges only)
Relationship Between Institutional Accreditation and Other State Activities
28 states require Non-Public institutions to be accredited to receive state funds, 7 have no linkage, 6 report that it depends on the funding program…the rest do not provide state funds to Non-Public institutions at all
16 states have transfer policies affecting all institutions, 9 of which require accreditation
22 states have transfer policies affecting only Public institutions, none of which require accreditation
6 states require programmatic accreditation for credits to transfer in accreditable disciplines
What Should States Ask Accreditors to Do?
Primary role in examining academic quality (especially at the undergraduate level)
Accreditation has played that role prominently through steadily escalating requirements on the assessment of student learning outcomes
States are counting on accreditors to play this role so they do not need to revert to mandating assessment as they did in the 1980s
Higher Education Act left accreditation largely unchanged
Emerging Department of Education agenda (consumer interests); IG (credits)
Congressional Hearings (fraud and abuse)
But accountability continues to drive
• Performance/National Goals/Costs; K-12 policies
State and Regional Initiatives: NGA, SHEEO, NCHEMS, etc.
Public Policy Expectations
Accreditation as Public Policy Tool
Responsive to major public policy shifts (e.g., access, community colleges, off-campus/distance education, focus on diversity, etc.); acceptance of institutional diversity
Highly cost effective process for Title IV purposes
Acceptance (however, diminishing over last two decades)
Relatively healthy triad, but with increasing federal directives
Less responsive to states
Accreditation’s “Deputized” Policy Role
Accreditation was never designed to do the things in policy that it is currently asked to do
• Federal role as “Inspector” for Title IV
• State roles in authorization to operate, receipt of state funds, and credit transfer
Limitations of a membership organization
Undercapitalized and understaffed
Site visit/review process not focused on “catching wrongdoing”
Fit for Public Purposes?
Confidentiality in era of accountability Peer review excludes some key stakeholders:
employers, students, etc. Poor fit of institutional model to blurring
boundaries: partnerships, contracting Capacity to understand challenges in for-profit
models Dogged by role in Title IV fraud and abuse of
1980s and early 90s; inadequate to the task Technologically challenged
Health of Institutional Support?
D.C. orgs. concern about accreditation. Ambivalence about involvement of for-profits
with large online operations; acquisitions and mergers
Strength of connectivity: how well does an agency listen?
Acceptance of increased agency oversight of institutional changes as dictated by DOE?• Off-site education; expansion of elearning;
International ventures; collaboratives and partnering
Problems with boundaries and borders Basically: Cost/benefit ratio
Is It Time to Re-Assess Accreditation’s Policy Role?
May be at a juncture similar to 1992 when the National Policy Board (NPB) proposed sweeping changes to accreditation
• Gatekeeper role re-assessed?
• Multiple levels of accreditation?
• Accreditation by institutional type rather than region?
• National qualifications framework for learning outcomes in place and adopted by accreditors?
But who would lead the charge?
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