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Joint ATS-WASC Accreditation Reviews Jerry McCarthy, ATS Teri Cannon, WASC.

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Presentation on theme: "Joint ATS-WASC Accreditation Reviews Jerry McCarthy, ATS Teri Cannon, WASC."— Presentation transcript:

1 Joint ATS-WASC Accreditation Reviews Jerry McCarthy, ATS Teri Cannon, WASC

2 2 Value of ATS-WASC Reviews Enriches the experience for the institution Brings more points of view to the evaluation of the institution Reduces duplicative work of preparing reports for and conducting two reviews

3 3 General Responsibilities Sharing information, reports, and actions on institutions Providing orientation to participating institutions and teams Coordinating actions Staffing teams collaboratively Planning visits collaboratively Conducting visits and preparing reports together

4 Protocol for the Conduct of Joint Visits WASC & ATS

5 5 General Principles of the Joint Protocol To facilitate the process of accreditation for the member institutions To guide the process of joint visits involving both accrediting agencies

6 6 Responsibilities of the WASC and ATS Staff Coordination of WASC Institutional Protocols Orientation of ATS/WASC Chairs Coordination of team recommendations and respective Commission actions Staffing: Usually 3-4 WASC visitors and 2 ATS visitors/ possibility of joint chair Two visits: Capacity and Preparatory Review (CPR) and Educational Effectiveness Review (EER) Normally most CPR members also serve, if possible, on EER team

7 7 Responsibilities of the WASC and ATS Staff Sharing of Documents: No restrictions on sharing of accreditation-related information Logistics of Visit Planning: WASC/ATS staffs consult on team composition 12 months prior to visits WASC/ATS staffs consult 20-24 weeks prior to coordinate planning WASC staff consult with school on team dates and coordinate with ATS staff Materials for visits sent to each agency 12 weeks prior to team members

8 8 Responsibilities of the Institutions Distribution of Institutional Presentations: Submitted to WASC and ATS (Proposals, CPR Review, EER Review) Distribution of WASC Institutional Proposal to ATS after approval by WASC CPR/EER Reports: 1 paper copy and 1 electronic copy to ATS/WASC and 1 copy to each team member 12 weeks prior to visit Reports for Special/Focused Visits: 4 copies to each agency + 1 to each team member 8 weeks prior Interim Reports and Progress Reports: 4 copies to agency requiring report + 1 copy to partner agency

9 9 Responsibilities of Team Evaluators Team Co-Chairs (one from each agency) Role of ATS Co-Chair: As prescribed in ATS Handbook of Accreditation Role of WASC Co-Chair: Responsible for oversight of visit, drafting WASC team report with WASC Assistant Chair, making team recommendation to Commission

10 10 Development and Construction of the Team Report General Report Coverage: Address standards/criteria of both agencies Report Format: Each agencys standards are addressed and appended to the partner agency report Report Content: Follows the guidelines of each agency Team Recommendations: Coordinated as much as possible for both agencies Consensus desired with respect to recommendations and monitoring actions Alignment desired as much as possible, but differences may emerge

11 11 Development and Construction of the Team Report Finalizing Team Report Commission staffs, team chairs/assistant chairs confer as soon as possible Drafts to be available ordinarily within two weeks of visit Exit Meeting and Confidentiality of Team Recommendations: Each agency has different practices and will report findings appropriately at the exit interview ATS and WASC teams are not required to make the same recommendation The Commissions of each agency make the final recommendations that may or may not follow the recommendation of the visiting team

12 12 More on the WASC Three-Stage Review Process 1. Proposal: Identifies priorities, areas of emphasis, and outcomes. Aligns work with institutional plans and needs. 2. Capacity/Preparatory Review: Focuses on capacity and readiness for educational effectiveness. 3. Educational Effectiveness: Focuses on results of assessment of student learning/quality improvement.

13 13 More on the Scope of the Two Reviews Capacity and Preparatory Preparatory as: readiness for the Educational Effectiveness Review Capacity as: purposes, integrity, stability, resources, structures, policies, processes Educational Effectiveness Demonstrating student learning Demonstrating institutional learning Demonstrating evidence-based decision-making

14 14 Timeline For Review (CPR/EER) 12 weeks 2 months Institution mails report to team and WASC Team holds conference call; chairs talk with CEO Site visit held and team report written Institution responds to errors of fact in team report Institution responds to final team report WASC Commission acts at February or June meeting

15 15 More on the Team Pre-Visit Preparation and Coordination Materials review Call with the CEO and chairs Pre-visit conference call –To meet team members –To identify issues and strategy –To agree on team assignments –To refine visit schedule –To identify needed documents –To plan visit logistics and report

16 16 WASC Standards and CFRs Core Commitments: Capacity and EE Standards: Broad, holistic, encompassing Criteria for Review: Provide specificity and meaning Guidelines: Ways to demonstrate compliance with CFRs

17 17 Team Use of the Standards and CFRs Team judgments must be linked to specific Standards and CFRs CFRs must be cited in reports Standards and CFRs form the basis for Commission decisions Standards and CFRs provide a context for continuous quality improvement

18 WASC Standards at a Glance

19 STANDARD 1: Defining Institutional Purposes and Ensuring Educational Objectives Institutional Purposes Integrity

20 STANDARD 2: Achieving Educational Objectives Through Core Functions Teaching and Learning Scholarship and Creativity Support for Student Learning

21 STANDARD 3: Developing and Applying Resources and Organizational Structures to Ensure Sustainability Faculty and Staff Fiscal, Physical, and Information Resources Organizational Structures and Decision-Making Processes

22 STANDARD 4: Creating an Organization Committed to Learning and Improvement Strategic Thinking and Planning Commitment to Learning and Improvement

23 23 Example: CFR 2.6 SLOs used to evaluate students, graduates achieve stated levels of attainment Capacity and Preparatory Has the institution defined expected levels of attainment for SL? Are they embedded in the standards and measures for student work? What data are collected & how analyzed? How are they measured? Educational Effectiveness What do data show? Are data disaggregated and analyzed? Has the institution used data analysis to make changes and/or improvements? How well are graduates achieving SLO?

24 Whats New on WASC Visits in 2008-09

25 25 WASC Visit Advisory for 2008-09 Systematic review and reporting of off-campus sites and distance education programs Analysis of retention and graduation rates Team rating of institution on Framework for Evaluating Educational Effectiveness (pilot) Compliance audits for new and sanctioned institutions

26 26 New WASC Tools for Teams: Rubrics for Assessment of Student Learning Academic Program Learning Outcomes Use of Portfolios in Assessing Program Outcomes Use of Capstones in Assessing Program Outcomes Integration of Student Learning Assessment into Program Review

27 27 WASC Expectations about Assessment of Student Learning CPR Student learning outcomes set at program and course level SLOs are in syllabi Faculty has developed assessment plans Faculty has set expectations for student achievement Faculty has tools to measurelearning (direct and indirect; multiple) EER Results of assessment show extent to which graduates are meeting expected levels of achievement Results used to improve student learning Results used to improve assessment strategies

28 28 Expected Examples of Evidence of Assessment Retention and graduation data/disaggregated and analyzed Standardized test results/licensing exams Faculty assessments –Grades –Portfolios, capstones and work samples Surveys and standardized interviews

29 29 Good Practice in Evidence of Educational Effectiveness Direct evidence of student learning and self- reported or indirect evidence Evidence related to the intended student learning outcomes -- validity Replicable evidence, representative of the student population -- reliability Multiple measures of student learning

30 30 Using the WASC EE Framework Identify where the institution fits on the framework for each line Use results to determine where the institution is in its evolution toward being a highly developed learning organization Use language of the framework in the report to guide the Commission and the institution

31 31 Using Evidence in Team Reports Use qualitative and quantitative evidence Select evidence carefully and purposefully Connect evidence to an assertion or question Analyze information; do not just put forth data Let evidence suggest improvements Use evidence that speaks to the institutions themes and the team's questions Address results/findings of assessment, not just process


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