STANDARD ONE: MISSION AND
PURPOSES
The institution’s mission and
purposes are appropriate to higher education, consistent with its charter or
other operating authority, and implemented in a manner that complies with the
Standards of the Commission on Institutions of Higher Education.
The institution’s mission gives direction to its activities and provides a
basis for the assessment and enhancement of the institution’s effectiveness.
1.1 The mission of the institution defines its distinctive
character, addresses the needs of society and identifies the students the
institution seeks to serve, and reflects both the institution's traditions and
its vision for the future. The institution’s mission provides the
basis upon which the institution identifies its priorities, plans its future
and evaluates its endeavors; it provides a basis for the evaluation of the
institution against the Commission’s Standards.
1.2 The institution's mission is set forth in a concise
statement that is formally adopted by the governing board and appears in
appropriate institutional publications.
1.3 The institution's purposes are concrete and realistic
and further define its educational and other dimensions, including scholarship,
research, and public service. Consistent with its mission, the
institution endeavors to enhance the communities it serves.
1.4 The mission and purposes of the institution are
accepted and widely understood by its governing board, administration, faculty,
staff, and students. They provide direction to the curricula and other
activities and form the basis on which expectations for student learning are
developed. Specific objectives, reflective of the institution's overall
mission and purposes, are developed by the institution's individual units.
Institutional Effectiveness
1.5 The institution periodically re-evaluates the content
and pertinence of its mission and purposes, assessing their usefulness in
providing overall direction in planning and resource allocation. The
results of this evaluation are used to enhance institutional
effectiveness.
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STANDARD TWO: PLANNING AND
EVALUATION
The institution undertakes planning
and evaluation to accomplish and improve the achievement of its mission
and purposes. It identifies its planning and evaluation priorities and
pursues them effectively.
2.1 Planning and evaluation are systematic, comprehensive,
broad-based, integrated, and appropriate to the institution. They involve
the participation of individuals and groups responsible for the achievement of
institutional purposes. Results of planning and evaluation are
regularly communicated to appropriate institutional constituencies. The
institution allocates sufficient resources for its planning and evaluation efforts.
2.2 Institutional research is sufficient to support planning and
evaluation. The institution systematically collects and uses data
necessary to support its planning efforts and to enhance institutional
effectiveness.
Planning
2.3 The institution plans beyond a short-term horizon, including
strategic planning that involves realistic analyses of internal and external
opportunities and constraints. It plans for and responds to financial and
other contingencies, establishes feasible priorities, and develops a realistic
course of action to achieve identified objectives. Institutional
decision-making, particularly the allocation of resources, is consistent with
planning priorities.
2.4 The institution has a demonstrable record of success in
implementing the results of its planning.
Evaluation
2.5 The institution regularly and systematically evaluates the
achievement of its mission and purposes, giving primary focus to the
realization of its educational objectives. Its system of evaluation is
designed to provide relevant and trustworthy information to support
institutional improvement, with an emphasis on the academic program. The
institution’s evaluation efforts are effective for addressing its unique
circumstances. These efforts use both quantitative and qualitative
methods.
2.6 The institution has a system of periodic review of academic
and other programs that includes the use of external perspectives.
2.7 Based on verifiable information, the institution
understands what its students have gained as a result of their education and
has useful evidence about the success of its recent graduates. This
information is used for planning and resource allocation and to inform the
public about the institution. (See also 10.10).
Institutional Effectiveness
2.8 The institution determines the effectiveness of its
planning and evaluation activities on an ongoing basis. Results of these
activities are used to further enhance the institution's implementation of its
purposes and objectives.
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STANDARD THREE: ORGANIZATION
AND GOVERNANCE
The institution has a system of
governance that facilitates the accomplishment of its mission and purposes and
supports institutional effectiveness and integrity. Through its
organizational design and governance structure, the institution creates and
sustains an environment that encourages teaching, learning, service,
scholarship, and where appropriate research and creative activity. It
assures provision of support adequate for the appropriate functioning of each
organizational component. The institution has sufficient independence
from any sponsoring entity to be held accountable for meeting the Commission's Standards
for Accreditation.
3.1 The authority, responsibilities, and relationships among the
governing board, administration, faculty, and staff are clearly described in
the institution’s by-laws, or an equivalent document, and in a table of
organization that displays the working order of the institution. The
board, administration, staff, and faculty understand and fulfill their
respective roles as set forth in the institution's official documents and are
provided with the appropriate information to undertake their respective
roles. The institution’s organizational structure, decision-making
processes, and policies are clear and consistent with its mission and support
institutional effectiveness. The institution's system of governance involves
the participation of all appropriate constituencies and includes regular
communication among them.
3.2 The governing board is the legally constituted body
ultimately responsible for the institution's quality and integrity. The
board demonstrates sufficient independence to ensure it can act in the
institution’s best interest. The composition of the board includes
representation of the public interest and reflects the areas of competence
needed to fulfill its responsibilities. More than one-half of the board
members, including the chair, are free of any personal or immediate familial
financial interest in the institution, including as employee, stock- or
share-holder, corporate director, or contractor. Members of the governing
board understand, accept, and fulfill their responsibilities as fiduciaries to
act honestly and in good faith in the best interest of the institution toward
the achievement of its purposes in a manner free from conflicts of
interest.
3.3 The board has a clear understanding of the institution’s
distinctive mission and purposes. It exercises the authority to ensure
the realization of institutional mission and purposes. The board sets and
reviews institutional policies; monitors the institution's fiscal solvency; and
approves major new initiatives, assuring that they are compatible with
institutional mission and capacity. These policies are developed in consultation
with appropriate constituencies. The board assures that the institution
periodically reviews its success in fulfilling its mission and achieving its
purposes.
3.4 The board systematically develops and ensures its own
effectiveness. The board enhances its effectiveness through periodic
evaluation.
3.5 Utilizing the institutional governance structure, the board
establishes and maintains appropriate and productive channels of communication
among its members and with the institutional community. Its role and
functions are effectively carried out through appropriate committees and
meetings.
3.6 The board appoints and periodically reviews the performance
of the chief executive officer whose full-time or major responsibility is to
the institution. ??3.7 The board delegates to the chief executive
officer and, as appropriate, to others the requisite authority and autonomy to
manage the institution compatible with the board's intentions and the
institutional mission. In exercising its fiduciary responsibility, the
governing board assures that senior officers identify, assess, and manage risks
and ensure regulatory compliance.
3.8 The chief executive officer through an appropriate
administrative structure effectively manages the institution so as to fulfill
its purposes and objectives and establishes the means to assess the
effectiveness of the institution. The chief executive officer manages and
allocates resources in keeping with institutional purpose and objectives and
assesses the effectiveness of the institution. The chief executive
officer assures that the institution employs staff sufficient in role, number,
and qualifications appropriate to the institution's mission, size, and
scope.??3.9 In accordance with established institutional mechanisms and
procedures, the chief executive officer and the administration consult with
faculty, students, other administrators and staff, and are appropriately
responsive to their concerns, needs, and initiatives. The institution's
internal governance provides for the appropriate participation of its
constituencies, promotes communications, and effectively advances the quality
of the institution.
3.10 The institution’s chief academic officer is directly
responsible to the chief executive officer, and in concert with the faculty and
other academic administrators is responsible for the quality of the academic
program. The institution’s organization and governance structure assure
the integrity and quality of academic programming however and wherever
offered. Off-campus, continuing education, distance education,
correspondence education, international, evening, and week-end programs are
clearly integrated and incorporated into the policy formation, and academic
oversight, and evaluation system of the institution.
3.11 In multi-campus systems organized under a single governing
board, the division of responsibility and authority between the system office
and the institution is clear. Where system and campus boards share
governance responsibilities or dimensions of authority, system policies and
procedures are clearly defined and equitably administered.
3.12 Faculty exercise an important role in assuring the academic
integrity of the institution's educational programs. Faculty have a
substantive voice in matters of educational programs, faculty personnel, and
other aspects of institutional policy that relate to their areas of
responsibility and expertise.
3.13 The system of governance makes provisions for consideration
of student views and judgments in those matters in which students have a direct
and reasonable interest.??3.14 Through its system of board and internal
governance, the institution ensures the appropriate consideration of relevant
perspectives; decision-making aligned with expertise and responsibility; and timely
action on institutional plans, policies, curricular change, and other key
considerations.
Institutional Effectiveness
3.15 The effectiveness of the institution’s organizational
structure and system of governance is improved through periodic and systematic
review.
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STANDARD FOUR: THE ACADEMIC
PROGRAM
The institution’s academic programs
are consistent with and serve to fulfill its mission and purposes. The
institution works systematically and effectively to plan, provide, oversee,
evaluate, improve, and assure the academic quality and integrity of its
academic programs and the credits and degrees awarded. The institution
sets a standard of student achievement appropriate to the degree awarded and
develops the systematic means to understand how and what students are learning
and to use the evidence obtained to improve the academic program.
4.1 The institution's programs are consistent with and serve to
fulfill its mission and purposes. The institution offers collegiate-level
programs consisting of a curriculum of studies that leads to a degree in a
recognized field of study and requires at least one year to complete. The
institution for which the associate's degree is the highest awarded offers at
least one program in liberal studies or another area of study widely available
at the baccalaureate level of regionally accredited colleges and
universities.
4.2 Through its system of academic administration and faculty
participation, the institution demonstrates an effective system of academic
oversight, assuring the quality of the academic program wherever and however it
is offered.
4.3 Each educational program demonstrates coherence through its
goals, structure, and content; policies and procedures for admission and
retention; instructional methods and procedures; and the nature, quality, and
extent of student learning and achievement. The institution offering
multiple academic programs ensures that all programs meet or exceed the basic
quality standards of the institution and that there is a reasonable consistency
in quality among them. The institution provides sufficient resources to
sustain and improve its academic programs.
4.4 Institutions offering degrees at multiple levels demonstrate
that expectations for student achievement, independent learning, skills in
inquiry, and critical judgment are graduated by degree level and in keeping with
generally accepted practice.??4.5 The institution publishes the learning
goals and requirements for each program. Such goals include the knowledge,
intellectual and academic skills, and methods of inquiry to be
acquired. In addition, if relevant to the program, goals include creative
abilities and values to be developed and specific career-preparation practices
to be mastered.
4.6 Degree programs have a coherent design and are characterized
by appropriate breadth, depth, continuity, sequential progression, and
synthesis of learning.
4.7 The institution ensures that students use information
resources and information technology as an integral part of their
education. The institution provides appropriate orientation and training
for use of these resources, as well as instruction and support in information
literacy and information technology appropriate to the degree level and field
of study. (See also 7.10)
4.8 Students completing an undergraduate or graduate degree
program demonstrate collegiate-level skills in the English language.
4.9 The institution develops, approves, administers, and on a
regular cycle reviews its degree programs under effective institutional
policies that are implemented by designated bodies with established channels of
communication and control. Faculty have a substantive voice in these
matters.
4.10 The institution undertakes academic planning and evaluation
as part of its overall planning and evaluation to enhance the achievement of
institutional mission and program objectives. These activities are
realistic and take into account stated goals and available resources. The
evaluation of existing programs includes an external perspective and assessment
of their effectiveness. Additions and deletions of programs are consistent
with institutional mission and capacity, faculty expertise, student needs, and
the availability of sufficient resources required for the development and
improvement of academic programs. The institution allocates resources on
the basis of its academic planning, needs, and objectives.
4.11 Institutions undertaking the initiation of degrees at a
higher or lower level, off-campus programs, programs that substantially broaden
the scope of the academic offerings, distance learning programs, correspondence
education programs, contractual relationships involving courses and programs,
academic programs overseas, or other substantive change demonstrate their
capacity to undertake and sustain such initiatives and to assure that the new
academic programming meets the standards of quality of the institution and the
Commission’s Standards and policies. In keeping with Commission policy,
institutions initiating substantive changes seek Commission approval prior to
implementation. The institution recognizes and takes account of the
increased demands on resources made by programs offered at a higher degree
level.
4.12 When programs are eliminated or program requirements are
changed, the institution makes appropriate arrangements for enrolled students
so that they may complete their education with a minimum of disruption.
4.13 If the institution depends on resources outside its direct
control (for example, classrooms, information resources, information
technology, testing sites), provision is made for a clear, fixed understanding
of that relationship that ensures the reasonable continued availability of
those resources. Clear descriptions of the circumstances and procedures
for the use of such resources are readily available to students who require
them.
Undergraduate Degree Programs
4.14 Undergraduate degree programs are designed to give students
a substantial and coherent introduction to the broad areas of human knowledge,
their theories and methods of inquiry, plus in-depth study in at least one
disciplinary or interdisciplinary area. Programs have an appropriate
rationale; their clarity and order are visible in stated requirements in
official publications and in student records.
4.15 Each undergraduate program includes a general education
requirement and a major or concentration requirement. At the baccalaureate
level, curricula include substantial requirements at the intermediate and
advanced undergraduate level, with appropriate prerequisites. Wherever
possible, the institution also affords undergraduate students the opportunity
to pursue knowledge and understanding through unrestricted electives.
General Education
4.16 The general education requirement is coherent and
substantive. It embodies the institution's definition of an educated
person and prepares students for the world in which they will live. The
requirement informs the design of all general education courses, and provides
criteria for its evaluation, including the assessment of what students learn.
4.17 The general education requirement in each undergraduate program
ensures adequate breadth for all degree-seeking students by showing a
balanced regard for what are traditionally referred to as the arts and
humanities, the sciences including mathematics, and the social
sciences. General education requirements include offerings that focus on
the subject matter and methodologies of these three primary domains of
knowledge as well as on their relationships to one another.
4.18 The institution ensures that all undergraduate students
complete at least the equivalent of forty semester hours in a bachelor's degree
program, or the equivalent of twenty semester hours in an associate's degree
program in general education.
4.19 Graduates successfully completing an undergraduate program
demonstrate competence in written and oral communication in English; the
ability for scientific and quantitative reasoning, for critical analysis and
logical thinking; and the capability for continuing learning, including the
skills of information literacy. They also demonstrate knowledge and
understanding of scientific, historical, and social phenomena, and a knowledge
and appreciation of the aesthetic and ethical dimensions of humankind.
The Major or Concentration
4.20 The major or area of concentration affords the student the
opportunity to develop knowledge and skills in a specific disciplinary or
clearly articulated interdisciplinary area above the introductory level through
properly sequenced course work. Requirements for the major or area of
concentration are based upon clear and articulated learning objectives,
including a mastery of the knowledge, information resources, methods, and
theories pertinent to a particular area of inquiry. Through the major or
area of concentration, the student develops an understanding of the complex
structure of knowledge germane to an area of inquiry and its interrelatedness
to other areas of inquiry. For programs designed to provide professional
training, an effective relationship exists between curricular content and
effective practice in the field of specialization. Graduates demonstrate
an in-depth understanding of an area of knowledge or practice, its principal
information resources, and its interrelatedness with other areas.
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Graduate Degree Programs
4.21 Graduate degree programs are designed to give students a
mastery of a complex field of study or professional area. Programs have an
appropriate rationale; their clarity and order are visible in stated
requirements, in relevant official publications, and in the demonstrated
learning experiences of graduates. Learning objectives reflect a high
level of complexity, specialization, and generalization.
4.22 Graduate programs are not offered unless resources and
expectations exceed those required for an undergraduate program in a similar
field. Information resources, information technology, and as appropriate
physical resources should exceed those required for an undergraduate program in
a similar field.
4.23 Institutions offering graduate degrees have an adequate
staff of full-time faculty in areas appropriate to the degree
offered. Faculty responsible for graduate programs are sufficient by
credentials, experience, number, and time commitment for the successful
accomplishment of program objectives and program improvement. The
scholarly expectations of faculty exceed those expected for faculty working at
the undergraduate level. Research-oriented graduate programs have a
preponderance of active research scholars on their
faculties. Professionally-oriented programs include faculty who are
experienced professionals making scholarly contributions to the development of
the field.
4.24 Students admitted to graduate degree programs are
demonstrably qualified for advanced academic study.
4.25 The institution's graduate programs have cohesive curricula
and require scholarly and professional activities designed to advance the
student substantially beyond the educational accomplishments of a baccalaureate
degree program. The demands made by the institution's graduate programs on
students' intellectual and creative capacities are also significantly greater
than those expected at the undergraduate level; graduate programs build upon
and challenge students beyond the levels of knowledge and competence acquired
at the undergraduate level. The institution offering both undergraduate
and graduate degree programs assesses the relationship and interdependence of
the two levels and utilizes the results for their individual and collective
improvement.
4.26 Degree requirements of the institution's graduate programs
take into account specific program purposes. Research-oriented doctoral
programs, including the Ph.D., and disciplinary master's degree programs are
designed to prepare students for scholarly careers; they emphasize the
acquisition, organization, utilization, and dissemination of
knowledge. Doctoral degree programs afford the student substantial mastery
of the subject matter, theory, literature, and methodology of a significant
field of study. They include a sequential development of research skills
leading to the attainment of an independent research capacity. Students
undertake original research that contributes to new knowledge in the chosen
field of study. Disciplinary master's programs have many of the same
objectives but require less sophisticated levels of mastery in the chosen field
of study than does the research doctorate. While they need not require
students to engage in original research, they do provide an understanding of
research appropriate to the discipline and the manner in which it is conducted.
4.27 Professional or practice-oriented programs at the doctoral
or master's degree levels are designed to prepare students for professional
practice involving the application or transmission of existing knowledge or the
development of new applications of knowledge within their field. Such
programs afford the student a broad conceptual mastery of the field of professional
practice through an understanding of its subject matter, literature, theory,
and methods. They seek to develop the capacity to interpret, organize, and
communicate knowledge, and to develop those analytical and professional skills
needed to practice in and advance the profession. Instruction in relevant
research methodology is provided, directed toward the appropriate application
of its results as a regular part of professional practice. Programs
include the sequential development of professional skills that will result in
competent practitioners. Where there is a hierarchy of degrees within an
area of professional study, programs differ by level as reflected in the
expected sophistication, knowledge, and capacity for leadership within the
profession by graduates.
4.28 Programs encompassing both research activities and
professional practice define their relative emphases in program objectives that
are reflected in curricular, scholarly, and program requirements.
4.29 Students who successfully complete a graduate program
demonstrate that they have acquired the knowledge and developed the skills that
are identified as the program's objectives.
Integrity in the Award of Academic
Credit
4.30 The institution’s degrees and other forms of academic
recognition are appropriately named, following practices common to American
institutions of higher education in terms of length, content, and level of the
programs. The institution ensures that minimum degree requirements are 60
semester credits at the associate's level, 120 semester credits at the
baccalaureate level, and 30 semester credits at the master's level.
4.31 The institution offers required and elective courses as
described in publicly available print and electronic formats with sufficient
availability to provide students with the opportunity to graduate within the
published program length.
4.32 The institution demonstrates its clear and ongoing
authority and administrative oversight for the academic elements of all courses
for which it awards institutional credit or credentials. These responsibilities
include course content and the delivery of the instructional program;
selection, approval, professional development, and evaluation of faculty;
admission, registration, and retention of students; evaluation of prior
learning; and evaluation of student progress, including the awarding and
recording of credit. The institution retains, even with contractual or
other arrangements, responsibility for the design, content, and delivery of
courses for which academic credit or degrees are awarded. The institution
awarding a joint, dual, or concurrent degree demonstrates that the
program is consistent with Commission policy, and that the student learning
outcomes meet the institution’s own standards and those of the Commission.
4.33 The evaluation of student learning or achievement and the
award of credit are based upon clearly stated criteria that reflect learning
objectives and are consistently and effectively applied. They are
appropriate to the degree level at which they are applied.
4.34 Credit awards are consistent with Commission policy and the
course content, appropriate to the field of study, and reflect the level and
amount of student learning. The award of credit is based on policies
developed and overseen by the faculty and academic administration. There
is demonstrable academic content for all experiences for which credit is
awarded, including study abroad, internships, independent study, and service
learning. No credit toward graduation is awarded for pre-collegiate level or
remedial work designed to prepare the student for collegiate study.
4.35 Credit for prior experiential or non-collegiate sponsored
learning is awarded only at the undergraduate level with appropriate
oversight by faculty and academic administration. When credit is
awarded on the basis of prior experiential or non-collegiate sponsored learning
alone, student learning and achievement are demonstrated to be at least
comparable in breadth, depth, and quality to the results of institutionally
provided learning experiences. The policies and procedures for the award
of credit for prior or experiential learning are clearly stated and available
to affected students.
4.36 The institution publishes requirements for continuation in,
termination from, or re-admission to its academic programs that are compatible
with its educational purposes. Decisions about the continuing academic standing
of enrolled students are based on clearly stated policies and applied by
faculty and academic administrators.
4.37 Graduation requirements are clearly stated in appropriate
electronic and print publications and are consistently applied in the degree
certification process. The degrees awarded accurately reflect student
attainments.
4.38 Faculty, with administrative support, ensure the academic
integrity of the award of grades, where applicable, and credits for individual
courses. The institution works to prevent cheating and plagiarism as well
as to deal forthrightly with any instances in which they occur.
4.39 The institution offering programs and courses for
abbreviated or concentrated time periods or via distance or correspondence
learning demonstrates that students completing these programs or courses
acquire levels of knowledge, understanding, and competencies equivalent to
those achieved in similar programs offered in more traditional time periods and
modalities. Programs and courses are designed to ensure an opportunity for
reflection and for analysis of the subject matter and the identification, analysis
and evaluation of information resources beyond those provided directly for the
course.
4.40 Courses and programs offered for credit off campus, through
distance or correspondence education, or through continuing education, evening
or week-end divisions are consistent with the educational objectives of the
institution. Such activities are integral parts of the institution and
maintain the same academic standards as courses and programs offered on
campus. They receive sufficient support for instructional and other
needs. Students have ready access to and support in using appropriate
learning resources. The institution maintains direct and sole
responsibility for the academic quality of all aspects of all programs and
assures adequate resources to maintain quality. (See also 3.10)
4.41 On-campus faculty have a substantive role in the design and
implementation of off-campus programs. Students enrolled in off-campus courses,
distance learning courses, and/or correspondence education courses have
sufficient opportunities to interact with faculty regarding course content and
related academic matters.
4.42 An institution that offers distance education or
correspondence education has procedures through which it establishes that the
student who registers for such a course or program is the same student who
participates in and completes the program and receives the academic
credit. In carrying out these procedures, the institution protects
student privacy.
4.43 Institutions offering certificates based on courses offered
for credit ensure the coherence and level of academic quality are consistent
with its degree programs.
4.44 In accepting undergraduate transfer credit from other
institutions, the institution applies policies and procedures that ensure that
credit accepted reflects appropriate levels of academic quality and is
applicable to the student's program. The institution’s policies for
considering the transfer of credit are publicly available to students and
prospective students on its website and in other communications. The
information includes the criteria established by the institution regarding the
transfer of credit earned at another institution of higher education along with
a list of institutions with which it has articulation agreements.
4.45 The institution does not erect barriers to the acceptance
of transfer credit that are unnecessary to protect its academic quality and
integrity, and it seeks to establish articulation agreements with institutions
from which and to which there is a significant pattern of student
transfer. Such agreements are made available to those students affected
by them.??4.46 Students complete at least one fourth of their
undergraduate program, including advanced work in the major or concentration,
at the institution awarding the degree. In accepting transfer credit, the
institution exercises the responsibility to ensure that students have met its
stated learning outcomes of programs at all degree levels. The acceptance
of transfer credit does not substantially diminish the proportion of
intermediate and advanced coursework in a student’s academic
program.
4.47 The institution accepts graduate credit in transfer on a
strictly limited basis to preserve the integrity of the degree awarded.
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Assessment of Student Learning
4.48 The institution implements and provides support for
systematic and broad-based assessment of what and how students are learning
through their academic program and experiences outside the classroom.
Assessment is based on clear statements of what students are expected to gain,
achieve, demonstrate, or know by the time they complete their academic program.
Assessment provides useful information that helps the institution to improve
the experiences provided for students, as well as to assure that the level of
student achievement is appropriate for the degree awarded. ??4.49
The institution’s approach to understanding student learning focuses on the
course, program, and institutional level. Evidence is considered at the
appropriate level of focus, with the results being a demonstrable factor in
improving the learning opportunities and results for students.
4.50 Expectations for student learning reflect both the mission
and character of the institution and general expectations of the larger
academic community for the level of degree awarded and the field of
study. These expectations include statements that are consistent with the
institution’s mission in preparing students for further study and employment,
as appropriate. (See also 1.4 and 2.7)
4.51 The institution’s approach to understanding what and how
students are learning and using the results for improvement has the support of
the institution’s academic and institutional leadership and the systematic
involvement of faculty. (See also 3.12)
4.52 The institution’s system of periodic review of academic
programs includes a focus on understanding what and how students learn as a
result of the program. (See also 2.6, 4.9 and 4.10)
4.53 The institution ensures that students have systematic,
substantial, and sequential opportunities to learn important skills and
understandings and actively engage in important problems of their discipline or
profession and that they are provided with regular and constructive feedback
designed to help them improve their achievement.
4.54 The institution uses a variety of quantitative and
qualitative methods and direct and indirect measures to understand the
experiences and learning outcomes of its students, and includes external
perspectives. The institution devotes appropriate attention to ensuring
that its methods of understanding student learning are trustworthy and provide
information useful in the continuing improvement of programs and services for
students.
Institutional Effectiveness
4.55 The institution’s principal evaluation focus is the
quality, integrity, and effectiveness of its academic programs. Evaluation
endeavors and systematic assessment are demonstrably effective in the
improvement of academic offerings and student learning.
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?STANDARD FIVE: FACULTY
The institution develops a faculty
that is suited to the fulfillment of the institution’s mission. Faculty
qualifications, numbers, and performance are sufficient to accomplish the
institution's mission and purposes. Faculty competently offer the
institution's academic programs and fulfill those tasks appropriately assigned
them.
5.1 Faculty categories (e.g., full-time, part-time, adjunct) are
clearly defined by the institution as is the role of each category in
fulfilling the institution's mission and purposes. Should part-time or
adjunct faculty be utilized, the institution has in place policies governing
their role compatible with its mission and purposes and the Standards of
the Commission.
5.2 The preparation and qualifications of all faculty are
appropriate to the field and level of their assignments. Qualifications
are measured by advanced degrees held, evidence of scholarship, advanced study,
creative activities, teaching abilities, and relevant professional experience,
training, and credentials. (See also 4.23)
5.3 There are an adequate number of faculty whose time
commitment to the institution is sufficient to assure the accomplishment of
class and out-of-class responsibilities essential for the fulfillment of
institutional mission and purposes. Responsibilities of teaching faculty
include instruction and the systematic understanding of effective
teaching/learning processes and outcomes in courses and programs for which they
share responsibility; additional duties may include such functions as student
advisement, academic planning, and participation in policy-making, course and
curricular development, research, and institutional governance.
5.4 The institution employs an open and orderly process for
recruiting and appointing its faculty. Faculty participate in the
search process for new members of the instructional staff. The institution
ensures equal employment opportunity consistent with legal requirements and any
other dimensions of its own choosing; compatible with its mission and purposes,
it addresses its own goals for the achievement of diversity among its
faculty. Faculty selection reflects the effectiveness of this process and
results in a variety of intellectual backgrounds and training. Each
prospective faculty member is provided with a written contract that states
explicitly the nature and term of the initial appointment and, when applicable,
institutional considerations that might preclude or limit future
appointments.
5.5 Where graduate teaching assistants are employed, the
institution carefully selects, trains, supervises, and evaluates them.
5.6 Faculty are accorded reasonable contractual security for
appropriate periods consistent with the institution's ability to fulfill its
mission. Salaries and benefits are set at levels that ensure the
institution’s continued ability to attract and maintain an appropriately qualified
instructional staff whose profile is consistent with the institution's mission
and purposes.
5.7 Faculty assignments and workloads are consistent with the
institution's mission and purposes. They are equitably determined to allow
faculty adequate time to provide effective instruction, advise and evaluate
students, contribute to program and institutional assessment and improvement,
continue professional growth, and participate in scholarship, research,
creative activities and service compatible with the mission and purposes of the
institution. Faculty workloads are reappraised periodically and adjusted
as institutional conditions change.
5.8 The full-time/part-time composition of the faculty reflects
the institution's mission, programs, and student body and is periodically
reviewed. The institution avoids undue dependence on part-time faculty,
adjuncts, temporary appointments, and graduate assistants to conduct
instruction. Institutions that employ part-time, adjunct, clinical or
temporary faculty assure their appropriate integration into the department and
institution and provide opportunities for faculty development.
5.9 The institution's academic organization and governance
structures and policies reflect the composition and variety of faculty
appointments.
5.10 In a faculty handbook or in other written documents that
are current and readily available, the institution clearly defines the responsibilities
of faculty and the criteria for their recruitment, appointment, evaluation,
promotion, and, if applicable, tenure. Such policies are equitable and
compatible with the mission and purposes of the institution; they provide for
the fair redress of grievances, and they are consistently applied and
periodically reviewed.
5.11 Faculty are demonstrably effective in carrying out their
assigned responsibilities. The institution employs effective procedures
for the regular evaluation of faculty appointments, performance, and
retention. The evaluative criteria reflect the mission and purposes of the
institution and the importance it attaches to the various responsibilities of
faculty, e.g., teaching, advising, assessment, scholarship, creative activities,
research, and professional and community service. The institution has
equitable and broad-based procedures for such evaluation applying to both full-
and part-time faculty, in which its expectations are stated clearly and
weighted appropriately for use in the evaluative process.
5.12 Faculty accept the responsibility for ensuring that the
content and methods of instruction meet generally accepted academic and
professional standards and expectations, and that considerations of program
improvement are informed by a shared understanding of what and how students are
learning in the program.
5.13 The institution provides its faculty with substantial and
equitable opportunities for continued professional development throughout their
careers. Such opportunities are consistent with and enhance the
achievement of the institution's mission and purposes. Faculty accept the
obligation to take advantage of these opportunities and otherwise take the
initiative in ensuring their continued competence and growth as teachers,
scholars, and practitioners.
5.14 The institution protects and fosters academic freedom of
all faculty regardless of rank or term of appointment.
5.15 The institution has a statement of expectations and
processes to ensure that faculty act responsibly and ethically, observe the
established conditions of their employment, and otherwise function in a manner
consistent with the mission and purposes of the institution.
Teaching and Advising
5.16 Instructional techniques and delivery systems, including technology,
are compatible with and serve to further the mission and purposes of the
institution as well as the learning goals of academic programs and objectives
of individual courses. Methods of instruction are appropriate to the
students' capabilities and learning needs. Scholarly and creative
achievement by students is encouraged and appropriately
assessed. ??5.17 Students in each program are taught by a variety of
faculty in order to ensure experience in different methods of instruction and
exposure to different viewpoints. Institutions regularly offering
multiple sections of the same course ensure an appropriate balance between
achieving consistency in learning outcomes and flexibility, allowing students
to benefit from individual faculty members' experience and teaching style.
5.18 The institution endeavors to enhance the quality of
teaching and learning wherever and however courses and programs are
offered. It encourages experimentation with methods to improve
instruction. The effectiveness of instruction is periodically and
systematically assessed using adequate and reliable procedures; the results are
used to improve instruction. Faculty collectively and individually
endeavor to fulfill their responsibility to improve instructional effectiveness. Adequate
support is provided to accomplish this task. (See also 8.2)
5.19 The institution has in place an effective system of
academic advising that meets student needs for information and advice and is
compatible with its educational objectives. Faculty and other personnel
responsible for academic advising are adequately informed and prepared to
discharge their advising functions. Resources are adequate to ensure the
quality of advising for students regardless of the location of instruction or
the mode of delivery.
5.20 With the administration, the faculty work systematically to
ensure an environment supportive of academic integrity.
Scholarship, Research, and Creative
Activity
5.21 All faculty pursue scholarship designed to ensure they are
current in the theory, knowledge, skills, and pedagogy of their discipline or
profession. The institution defines the scholarly expectations for faculty
consistent with its mission and purposes and the level of degrees
offered. Scholarship and instruction are integrated and mutually
supportive.
5.22 Where compatible with the institution's purposes and
reflective of the level of degrees offered, research is undertaken by faculty
and students directed toward the creation, revision, or application of
knowledge. Physical, technological, and administrative resources together
with academic services are adequate to support the institution's commitment to
research and creative activity. Faculty workloads reflect this
commitment. Policies and procedures related to research, including ethical
considerations, are established and clearly communicated throughout the
institution. Faculty exercise a substantive role in the development and
administration of research policies and practices.
5.23 Scholarship, research, and creative activities receive
encouragement and support appropriate to the institution’s purposes and
objectives. Faculty and students are accorded academic freedom in these
activities.
Institutional Effectiveness
5.24 The institution periodically evaluates the sufficiency of
and support for the faculty and the effectiveness of the faculty in teaching
and advising, scholarship, service, and as appropriate to institutional
mission, research and creative activity. The results of these evaluations
are used to enhance fulfillment of the institution’s mission.
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?STANDARD SIX: STUDENTS
Consistent with its mission, the
institution defines the characteristics of the students it seeks to serve and
provides an environment that fosters the intellectual and personal development
of its students. It recruits, admits, enrolls, and endeavors to ensure the
success of its students, offering the resources and services that provide them
the opportunity to achieve the goals of their program as specified in
institutional publications. The institution’s interactions with students
and prospective students are characterized by integrity.
Admissions
6.1 Consistent with its mission, the institution sets and
achieves realistic goals to enroll a student body that is broadly
representative of the population the institution wishes to serve and addresses
its own goals for the achievement of diversity among its students.??6.2
The institution has an orderly and ethical program of admission that complies
with the requirements of legislation concerning equality of educational
opportunity. Its admission and retention policies and procedures are
clear, consistent with its mission and purposes, and available to all students
and prospective students electronically and through other appropriate
publications.
6.3 Standards for admission ensure that student qualifications
and expectations are compatible with institutional objectives. Individuals
admitted demonstrate through their intellectual and personal qualifications a
reasonable potential for success in the programs to which they are
admitted. If the institution recruits and admits individuals with
identified needs that must be addressed to assure their likely academic
success, it applies appropriate mechanisms to address those needs so as to
provide reasonable opportunities for that success. Such mechanisms receive
sufficient support and are adequate to the needs of those admitted. The
institution endeavors to integrate specifically recruited populations into the
larger student body and to assure that they have comparable academic
experiences.
6.4 The institution utilizes appropriate methods of evaluation
to identify deficiencies and offers appropriate developmental or remedial
support where necessary to prepare students for collegiate study. Such
testing and remediation receive sufficient support and are adequate to serve
the needs of students admitted. (For admission of graduate students, see 4.24.)
Retention and Graduation
6.5 The institution demonstrates its ability to admit students
who can be successful in the institution’s academic program, including
specifically recruited populations. It ensures a systematic approach to
providing accessible and effective programs and services designed to provide
opportunities for enrolled students to be successful in achieving their
academic goals. The institution provides students with information and
guidance regarding opportunities and experiences that may help ensure their
academic success.
6.6 The institution measures student success, including rates of
retention and graduation and other measures of success appropriate to
institutional mission.??6.7 Measures of student success, including rates
of retention and graduation, are separately determined for any group that the
institution specifically recruits, and those rates are used in evaluating the
success of specialized recruitment and the services and opportunities provided
for the recruited students.??6.8 The institution’s goals for retention
and graduation reflect institutional purposes, and the results are used to
inform recruitment and the review of programs and services. ??6.9
Data on retention, graduation, and other measures of student success are
regularly reviewed within the institution, with the results being used for
planning, resource allocation, and improvement.
Student Services
6.10 The institution systematically identifies the
characteristics and learning needs of its student population and then makes
provision for responding to them. The institution’s student services are
guided by a philosophy that reflects the institution’s mission and special
character, is circulated widely and reviewed periodically, and provides the
basis on which services to students can be evaluated. ??6.11 The
institution offers an array of student services appropriate to its mission and
the needs and goals of its students, recognizing the variations in services
that are appropriate at the main campus, at off-campus locations, and for
programs delivered electronically as well as the differences in circumstances
and goals of students pursuing degrees. In all cases, the institution
provides academic support services appropriate to the student body. The
institution's faculty and professional staff collectively have sufficient
interaction with students outside of class to promote students' academic
achievement and provide academic and career guidance. In providing
services, in accordance with its mission and purposes, the institution adheres
to both the spirit and intent of equal opportunity and its own goals for
diversity. (See also 5.19, 7.7, 7.8, 8.3, and 11.8)??6.12
Institutions with full time or residential student bodies provide an array of
services that includes access to health services and co-curricular activities
consistent with the mission of the institution.??6.13 A clear description
of the nature, extent, and availability of student services is easily available
to students and prospective students. Newly enrolled students are provided
with an orientation that includes information on student services as well as a
focus on academic opportunities, expectations, and support services.??6.14
Student financial aid is provided through a well-organized program. Awards
are based on the equitable application of clear and publicized criteria.
Students are provided with clear and timely information about debt before
borrowing.??6.15 As appropriate, the institution supports opportunities
for student leadership and participation in campus organizations and
governance. ??6.16 If the institution offers recreational and
athletic programs, they are conducted in a manner consistent with sound
educational policy, standards of integrity, and the institution's
purposes. The institution has responsibility for the control of these
programs, including their financial aspects. Educational programs and
academic expectations are the same for student athletes as for other
students.??6.17 The institution ensures that individuals responsible for
student services are qualified by formal training and work experience to
represent and address the needs of students effectively. Facilities, technology,
and funding are adequate to implement the institution's student service
policies and procedures.??6.18 The institution has identified, published
widely, and implemented an appropriate set of clearly stated ethical standards
to guide student services. Policies on student rights and
responsibilities, including grievance procedures, are clearly stated, well
publicized and readily available, and fairly and consistently
administered.??6.19 The institution has policies regarding the kinds of
information that will be included in the permanent record of students as well
as policies regarding the retention, safety and security, and disposal of
records. Its information-release policies respect the rights of individual
privacy, the confidentiality of records, and the best interests of students and
the institution.
6.20 Institutions with stated goals for students’ co-curricular
learning systematically assess their achievement.
Institutional Effectiveness
6.21 Through a program of regular and systematic evaluation, the
institution assesses its effectiveness in admitting and retaining students and
the appropriateness and effectiveness of its student services to advance
institutional purposes. Information obtained through this evaluation is
used to revise these goals and services and improve their achievement.
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STANDARD SEVEN: LIBRARY AND
OTHER INFORMATION RESOURCES
The institution provides sufficient
and appropriate library and information resources. The institution
provides adequate access to these resources and demonstrates their
effectiveness in fulfilling its mission. The institution provides
instructional and information technology sufficient to support its teaching and
learning environment.
Resources and Access
7.1 The institution articulates a clear vision of the level and
breadth of information resources and services and of instructional and
information technology appropriate to support its academic mission and its
administrative functions. Through strategic, operational, and financial
planning, it works to achieve that vision.
7.2 Institutional planning and resource allocation support the
development of library, information resources and technology appropriate to the
institution’s mission and academic program. The institution provides
sufficient and consistent financial support for the library and the effective
maintenance and improvement of the institution’s information resources and
instructional and information technology.
7.3 The institution uses instructional technology appropriate to
its academic mission and the modes of delivery of its academic program.
7.4 Professionally qualified and numerically adequate staff
administer the institution’s library, information resources and services, and
instructional and information technology support functions.
7.5 Through ownership or guaranteed access, the institution
makes available the library and information resources necessary for the
fulfillment of its mission and purposes. These resources are sufficient in
quality, level, diversity, quantity, and currency to support and enrich the
institution’s academic offerings. They support the academic and research
program and the intellectual and cultural development of students, faculty, and
staff.
7.6 Faculty, staff, and students are provided appropriate
training and support to make effective use of library and information
resources, and instructional and information technology.
7.7 The institution ensures appropriate access to library and
information resources and services for all students regardless of program
location or mode of delivery.
7.8 The institution ensures that students have available and are
appropriately directed to sources of information appropriate to support and
enrich their academic work.
Information and Technological Literacy
7.9 The institution demonstrates that students use information
resources and technology as an integral part of their education, attaining
levels of proficiency appropriate to their degree and subject or professional
field of study.
7.10 The institution ensures that throughout their program of
study students acquire increasingly sophisticated skills in evaluating the
quality of information sources appropriate to their field of study and the
level of the degree program. (See also 4.7)
Institutional Effectiveness
7.11 The institution regularly and systematically evaluates the
adequacy, utilization, and impact of its library, information resources and
services, and instructional and information technology and uses the findings to
improve and increase the effectiveness of these services.
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STANDARD EIGHT: PHYSICAL AND
TECHNOLOGICAL RESOURCES
The institution has sufficient and
appropriate physical and technological resources necessary for the achievement
of its purposes. It manages and maintains these resources in a manner to
sustain and enhance the realization of institutional purposes.
8.1 The institution’s physical and technological resources,
including classrooms, laboratories, network infrastructure, materials,
equipment, and buildings and grounds, whether owned or rented, are commensurate
with institutional purposes. They are designed, maintained, and managed at
both on- and off-campus sites in a manner that serves institutional
needs. Proper management, maintenance, and operation of all physical
facilities, including student housing provided by the institution, are
accomplished by adequate and competent staffing.
8.2 Classrooms and other facilities are appropriately equipped
and adequate in capacity. Classrooms and other teaching spaces support
teaching methods appropriate to the discipline. Students and faculty have
access to appropriate physical, technological, and educational resources to
support teaching and learning. (See also 5.18)
8.3 Facilities are constructed and maintained in accordance with
legal requirements to ensure access, safety, security, and a healthful
environment with consideration for environmental and ecological concerns.
8.4 The institution undertakes physical resource planning linked
to academic and student services, support functions, and financial
planning. It determines the adequacy of existing physical and
technological resources and identifies and plans the specified resolution of
deferred maintenance needs. Space planning occurs on a regular basis as
part of physical resource evaluation and planning, and is consistent with the
mission and purposes of the institution.
8.5 The institution demonstrates the effectiveness of its
policies and procedures in ensuring the reliability of the systems, the
integrity and security of data, and the privacy of individuals. The
institution establishes and applies clear policies and procedures and monitors
and responds to illegal or inappropriate uses of its technology systems and
resources.??8.6 The institution's physical and electronic environments
provide an atmosphere conducive to study and research.??8.7 The
institution uses information technology sufficient to ensure its efficient
ability to plan, administer, and evaluate its program and services.
Institutional Effectiveness
8.8 The institution’s ongoing evaluation of its physical and
technological resources in light of its mission, current needs and plans for
the future is a basis of realistic planning and budget allocation.
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STANDARD NINE: FINANCIAL
RESOURCES
The institution's financial
resources are sufficient to sustain the quality of its educational program and
to support institutional improvement now and in the foreseeable future.
The institution demonstrates, through verifiable internal and external
evidence, its financial capacity to graduate its entering class. The
institution administers its financial resources with integrity.?
9.1 The institution preserves and enhances available financial
resources sufficient to support its mission. It manages its financial
resources and allocates them in a way that reflects its mission and
purposes. It demonstrates the ability to respond to financial emergencies
and unforeseen circumstances.
9.2 The institution is financially stable. Ostensible
financial stability is not achieved at the expense of educational
quality. Its stability and viability are not unduly dependent upon
vulnerable financial resources or an historically narrow base of
support. The institution's governing board retains appropriate autonomy in
all budget and finance matters; this includes institutions that depend on
financial support from an external agency (state, church, or other private or
public entity).
9.3 The institution’s multi-year financial planning is realistic
and reflects the capacity of the institution to depend on identified sources of
revenue and ensure the advancement of educational quality and services for
students. The governing board reviews and approves the institution’s
financial plans based on multi-year analysis and financial forecasting.
9.4 All or substantially all of the institution's revenue is
devoted to the support of its academic purposes and programs. The
institution's financial records clearly relate to its educational
activities.
9.5 The institution and its governing board regularly and
systematically review the effectiveness of the institution’s financial aid
policy and practices in advancing the institution’s mission and helping to
ensure that the institution enrolls and supports the student body it seeks to
serve.??9.6 The institution ensures that it has sufficient professionally
qualified finance staff, led by a chief financial officer whose primary
responsibility is to the institution.
9.7 The institution ensures the integrity of its finances
through prudent financial management and organization, a well-organized budget
process, appropriate internal control mechanisms, risk assessment, and timely
financial reporting to internal and external constituency groups, providing a
basis for sound financial decision-making.
9.8 The institution establishes and implements its budget after
appropriate consultation with relevant constituencies in accord with realistic
overall planning that provides for the appropriate integration of academic,
student service, fiscal, development, information and technology and physical
resource priorities to advance its educational objectives.
9.9 The institution’s financial planning, including contingency
planning, is integrated with overall planning and evaluation processes. The
institution demonstrates its ability to analyze its financial condition and
understand the opportunities and constraints that will influence its financial
condition and acts accordingly. It reallocates resources as necessary to achieve
its purposes and objectives. The institution implements a realistic plan
for addressing issues raised by the existence of any operating deficit. (See
also 2.3)
9.10 Opportunities identified for new sources of revenue are
reviewed by the administration and board to ensure the integrity of the
institution and the quality of the academic program are maintained and
enhanced. The institution planning a substantive change demonstrates the
financial capacity to ensure that the new initiative meets the standards of quality
of the institution and the Commission’s Standards.
9.11 Institutional and board leadership ensure the institution’s
ethical oversight of its financial resources and practices.
9.12 The institution’s financial resources and transactions are
audited annually by an external auditor in accord with the generally accepted
auditing standards for colleges and universities as adopted by the American
Institute of Certified Public Accountants. Board policies and
institutional practices ensure the independence and objectivity of the auditor
and the appropriate consideration of the audit by the governing board. For
public and independent institutions part of a larger system or corporation, the
audit provides sufficient information about the institution’s finances to
support a determination regarding the sufficiency and stability of the
institution’s financial resources. In all cases, the audit and management
letter are appropriately reviewed by the institution's administration and
governing board who take appropriate action on resulting recommendations or
conclusions.
9.13 The institution directs its fund-raising efforts toward the
fulfillment of institutional purposes and conducts them in accordance with
clear and complete policies that stipulate the conditions and terms under which
gifts are solicited and accepted. The institution accurately represents
itself and its capacities and needs to prospective donors and accurately
portrays the impact that their gifts can reasonably be expected to
have. Gifts are promptly directed toward donors' intentions.
9.14 All fiscal policies, including those related to budgeting,
investments, insurance, risk management, contracts and grants, transfers and
inter-fund borrowing, fund-raising, and other institutional advancement and development
activities, are clearly stated in writing and consistently implemented in
compliance with ethical and sound financial practices.
Institutional Effectiveness
9.15 The institution has in place appropriate internal and
external mechanisms to evaluate its fiscal condition and financial management
and to maintain its integrity. The institution uses the results of these
activities for improvement.
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?STANDARD TEN: PUBLIC
DISCLOSURE
In presenting itself to students,
prospective students, and other members of the interested public, the
institution provides information that is complete, accurate, timely,
accessible, clear and sufficient for intended audiences to make informed
decisions about the institution.
10.1 The information published by the institution on its website
is sufficient to allow students and prospective students to make informed
decisions about their education. The institution’s public website includes
the information specified elsewhere in this Standard (10.2 – 10.13).
10.2 The institution informs the public of the information
available about itself and how inquiries can be addressed. It is
also responsive to reasonable requests for information about itself. The
institution provides notice as to the availability upon request of its
publications and its most recent audited financial statement or a fair summary
thereof.
10.3 The institution’s current catalogue describes the
institution consistent with its mission statement and sets forth the
obligations and responsibilities of both students and the institution. The
catalogue or other authoritative publications present information relative to
admission and attendance. Institutions relying on electronic catalogues
ensure the availability of archival editions sufficient to serve the needs of
alumni and former and returning students.
10.4 All forms of print and electronic communications officially
representing the institution are consistent with catalogue content and
accurately portray the conditions and opportunities available at the
institution.
10.5 The institution publishes its mission, objectives, and
expected educational outcomes; its status as a public or independent
institution; if independent, its status as a not-for-profit or for-profit
institution; any religious affiliation; requirements and procedures and
policies related to admissions and the transfer of credit; a list of
institutions with which it has articulation agreements; student fees, charges
and refund policies; rules and regulations for student conduct; procedures for
student appeals and complaints; other items related to attending or withdrawing
from the institution; academic programs, courses currently offered, and other
available educational opportunities; and academic policies and procedures and
the requirements for degrees or other forms of academic recognition.
10.6 The institution publishes a list of its current faculty,
indicating departmental or program affiliation, distinguishing between those
who have full- and part-time status, showing degrees held and the institutions
granting them. The names and positions of administrative officers, and the
names and principal affiliations of members of the governing board are also
included.
10.7 The institution publishes the locations and programs
available at branch campuses, other instructional locations, including those
overseas operations at which students can enroll for a degree, along with a
description of the programs and services available at each location.
10.8 The institution clearly indicates those programs, courses,
services, and personnel not available during a given academic year. It
does not list as current any courses not taught for two consecutive years that
will not be taught during the third consecutive year.
10.9 The institution publishes a description of the size and
characteristics of the student body, the campus setting, the availability of academic
and other support services, the range of co-curricular and non-academic
opportunities available to students; and those institutional learning and
physical resources from which a student can reasonably be expected to benefit.
10.10 The institution publishes statements of its goals for
students’ education and the success of students in achieving those
goals. Information on student success includes rates of retention and
graduation and other measures of student success appropriate to institutional
mission. As appropriate, recent information on passage rates for licensure
examinations is also published.
10.11 The institution publishes information about the total cost
of education, including the availability of financial aid and the typical
length of study. The expected amount of student debt upon graduation is
provided to help students and prospective students make informed decisions.
10.12 The institution has readily available valid documentation
for any statements and promises regarding such matters as program excellence,
learning outcomes, success in placement, and achievements of graduates or
faculty.
10.13 The institution's statements about its current accredited
status are accurately and explicitly worded. An institution placed on
probation by the New England Association discloses this status in its catalogue
and recruitment materials and in any other publication, print or electronic, in
which the institution’s accreditation is mentioned, as well as the availability
of additional information on its probationary status.
Institutional Effectiveness
10.14 Through a systematic process of periodic review, the
institution ensures that its print and electronic publications are complete,
accurate, available, and current. The results of the review are used for
improvement.
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STANDARD ELEVEN: INTEGRITY
The institution subscribes to and
advocates high ethical standards in the management of its affairs and in all of
its dealings with students, prospective students, faculty, staff, its governing
board, external agencies and organizations, and the general public.
Through its policies and practices, the institution endeavors to exemplify the
values it articulates in its mission and related statements.
11.1 The institution expects that members of its community,
including the board, administration, faculty, staff, and students, will act
responsibly and with integrity; and it systematically provides support in the
pursuit thereof. Institutional leadership fosters an atmosphere where
issues of integrity can be openly considered, and members of the institutional
community understand and assume their responsibilities in the pursuit of
integrity.
11.2 Truthfulness, clarity, and fairness characterize the
institution's relations with all internal and external
constituencies. Adequate provision is made to ensure academic
honesty. Appropriate policies and procedures are in effect and
periodically reviewed for matters including intellectual property rights, the
avoidance of conflict of interest, privacy rights, and fairness in dealing with
students, faculty, and staff. The institution's educational policies and
procedures are applicable and equitably applied to all its students.
11.3 The institution is committed to the free pursuit and
dissemination of knowledge. It assures faculty and students the freedom to
teach and study a given field, to examine all pertinent data, to question
assumptions, and to be guided by the evidence of scholarly research.
11.4 The institution observes the spirit as well as the letter
of applicable legal requirements. It has a charter and/or other formal
authority from the appropriate governmental agency authorizing it to grant all
degrees it awards; it has the necessary operating authority for each
jurisdiction in which it conducts activities; and it operates within this
authority.
11.5 The institution adheres to non-discriminatory policies and
practices in recruitment, admissions, employment, evaluation, disciplinary
action, and advancement. It fosters an atmosphere within the institutional
community that respects and supports people of diverse characteristics and
backgrounds.
11.6 The institution manages its academic, research and service
programs, administrative operations, responsibilities for students and
interactions with prospective students with honesty and integrity.
11.7 The institution is responsible for conferences, institutes,
workshops, or other instructional or enrichment activities that are sponsored
by the institution or carry its name. These activities are compatible with
the institution’s purposes and are administered within its organizational
structure. The institution assumes responsibility for the appropriateness
and integrity of such activities.
11.8 The institution has established and publicizes clear
policies ensuring institutional integrity. Included among them are
appropriate policies and procedures for the fair resolution of grievances
brought by faculty, staff, or students.
11.9 In its relationships with the Commission on Institutions of
Higher Education, the institution demonstrates honesty and integrity, and it
complies with the Commission's Standards, policies, Requirements of
Affiliation, and requests.
11.10 In addition to the considerations stated in this Standard,
the institution adheres to those requirements related to institutional
integrity embodied in all other Commission Standards.
Institutional Effectiveness
11.11 The pursuit of institutional integrity is strengthened
through the application of findings from periodic and episodic assessments of
the policies and conditions that support the achievement of these aims among
members of the institutional community.