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Interpreting & Applying the Standards October 4, 2006 Dr. Luis J. Pedraja, Vice President Middle States Commission on Higher Education
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OVERVIEW Guiding Principles Role of Mission Eligibility Requirements, Standards, and the Fundamental Elements How the standards are connected Planning, Resource Allocation, & Assessment Team Reports & Range of Action
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Guiding Principles Greater flexibility More attention to important functions and less to specific structures Broadened definitions: governance/governing body, faculty, related educational activities Focus on assessment/results rather than inputs/processes Clearer format
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Institutional MISSION and Accreditation STANDARDS
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Eligibility Certification & Other Matters Institutions seeking candidacy, initial accreditation, or reaffirmation of accreditation must meet eligibility requirements Eligibility Certification Statement Third party comments
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Overview of the Standards 14 Standards, in 2 sections: – Institutional Context (Standards 1 – 7) – Educational Effectiveness (Standards 8 – 14) Each section concludes with an assessment standard (7 & 14)
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Institutional Context Standards 1-7 1. Mission, Goals, and Objectives 2. Planning, Resource Allocation, and Institutional Renewal 3. Institutional Resources 4. Leadership and Governance 5. Administration 6. Integrity 7. Institutional Assessment
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Educational Effectiveness Standards 8-14 8. Student Admissions 9. Student Support Services 10. Faculty 11. Educational Offerings 12. General Education 13. Related Educational Activities 14. Assessment of Student Learning
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Format: Each Standard Standard Context Fundamental Elements Optional Analysis and Evidence
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Applying the Fundamental Elements > within the institutional self-study > during the evaluation team visit
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Fundamental Elements & the Self-Study In conjunction with institutional mission & goals, fundamental elements help to frame self-study questions Elements guide institutions in demonstrating how they comply with the standards Elements help frame the self-study analysis and recommendations
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Fundamental Elements & the Team Visit Help to frame the teams questions Must be viewed in the context of the institutions mission and its self-study design and report Together (not individually) the Fundamental Elements constitute and encompass the standard Elements are not a checklist
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Fundamental Elements & the Team Visit, continued Fundamental elements are subordinate to the accreditation standard Elements are likely reference points for commendations, suggestions, recommendations, and/or requirements
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Optional Analysis & Evidence Used by institution as part of its own self-study Not intended for use by the team for evaluation Information is optional for the institution and not required
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The Standards: How is it all related?
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Impact on Self-Study? Accreditation standards cannot be totally separated/isolated Need for collaboration and communication among work groups Likely overlap in analysis, findings, and recommendations
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Impact on Evaluation Team? Need for collaboration among team members (key questions, interviews, document review) Need to assure consistency (& absence of unintended redundancy) in team findings, suggestions, and recommendations
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Planning, Resource Allocation, and Assessment What is the relationship among these? How does the relationship affect the institutional self-study and the work of the evaluation team?
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ASSESSMENT Q: What does Middle States expect/require? A: See Standard 7 & Standard 14
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Applying the Standards & the Team Report
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Report Templates & Self-Study Self-Study structure will affect how standards are covered in the report Comprehensive models – Structured according to standards – Grouping of Standards – Topical Approach Selected Topics model Collaborative model
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Team Member Reports Significant accomplishments Suggestions Recommendations: – Addressed in PRR – Requiring follow-up (need more immediate attention) Requirements Additional Information: – General observations – Documents cited as justification for observations/recommendations – List of people interviewed
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Team Report TEMPLATES Context & nature of visit Compliance w/ eligibility requirements Compliance w/ federal & other requirements Evaluation overview Compliance w/ accreditation standards Summary of recommendations/requirements
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TEAM REPORT: Suggestions, Recommendations, or Requirements Suggestions = optional consultative advice Recommendations = actions needed to continue improvement or to assure continuing compliance Requirements = actions needed to achieve compliance
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Levels of FOLLOW-UP Suggestions -> no follow-up Recommendations -> routinely addressed through PRR; team may request earlier follow-up through progress letter or monitoring report Requirements -> warning, probation, show cause (monitoring report) OR postponement (supplemental information report)
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Standardized Language Allows for consistency in the actions Helps you formulate language They are guidelines
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Questions?
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