1 / 26

Preparing for Accreditation

Preparing for Accreditation. What CIOs Need to Know. Who Are We?. Meridith Randall – ACCJC ALO for 17 years for 3 different colleges; never had a college receive a sanction; has written multiple self-evaluations, midterm reports, and FU reports; has served on 4 teams, most recently Oct. 2013

meris
Download Presentation

Preparing for Accreditation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Preparing for Accreditation What CIOs Need to Know

  2. Who Are We? • Meridith Randall – ACCJC ALO for 17 years for 3 different colleges; never had a college receive a sanction; has written multiple self-evaluations, midterm reports, and FU reports; has served on 4 teams, most recently Oct. 2013 • Mary Kay Rudolph --

  3. Preparing for Accreditation • Preparing for the External Team • Ideally, teams are trained a few weeks ahead of the visit -- in reality, some team members may be added late to replace others • Most teams have a couple of CEOs, a CIO, student services personnel, and should have faculty (but may not)

  4. Team Preparation • Materials used to train/Team Members • Handouts • Team members must draft a great deal of the report based on the self-evaluation • Recently, the first meeting is on Monday, then interviews begin immediately • Depending on the team, interviews may or may not be coordinated • Team members may or may not follow guidelines of professionalism

  5. What Does the Team Expect? • A comfortable room with hard evidence • Evidence at the hotel • The ability to change interviews frequently • Tech support on call • Decent food • Endless caffeine What is an unreasonable expectation from a team?

  6. Team Focus • Anything you identified in your self-evaluation as a problem • Anything currently on ACCJC’s radar • Any particular interests of the team member • The Rubrics

  7. The Nitty-Gritty: Standard I • Mission Statement (IA) • Some elements to consider: • Are intended students identified? • Are learning outcomes mentioned or implied? • Was development of mission statement inclusive? • How is effectiveness assessed? • What is cycle to review mission statement? Is it followed? Is the review process inclusive? • Can you demonstrate that the mission statement is central to college planning? • How is it communicated?

  8. Mission Statement Realities • Don’t claim you review it regularly if you don’t • The proposed standards put more emphasis on using data to prove the college accomplishes its mission • Usually reviewed by CEOs on team

  9. Improving Institutional Effectiveness (IB) • Key elements: • Dialogue about student learning and processes • What hard evidence do you have? • What results have come from dialogue? • What will your colleagues tell the team?

  10. IB continued • Measurable goals • What was the process to set college goals? • Was it inclusive? Will staff say it was? • Where and how are they used in planning, resource allocation, etc.? • What data is used to show progress toward goals? • Planning process • Is there broad involvement? • Are resources allocated consistent with goals? • Have the results of resource allocation been measured?

  11. The Nitty-Gritty: Standard II • IIA. Instructional Programs • While this is the heart of what we do at the college, most colleges do not get into trouble for Standard II, with a couple of exceptions: • SLO assessment and comparable support for online students • Allocation of resources to support instruction, library, etc.

  12. Current standards • Must have some kind of program review/vitality assessment process • Must assess student learning needs to inform programs • Must determine if students meet learning outcomes at all levels, and use results for improvement

  13. Must use “delivery systems” that meet student needs and assess their effectiveness • Must have a process to determine what is offered as credit, community ed, pre-collegiate, etc. • Must have active advisory committees for CTE programs

  14. General education should include all components listed in the standard and GELOs should exist and be assessed • Must have program elimination process • Must publicize student learning assessment results

  15. Changes in New Standards • Syllabi must include course SLOs • Clock to credit hour standards • Emphasis on scheduling in a manner that facilitates student completion • Student Support and Library and Learning Support Services are one section

  16. IIB. Student Support Services • Difficult to be sanctioned based on this section • Essentially, there is a process to determine support needs and to assess their effectiveness (often through SAOs), including placement, advising, and online services • In new standards, catalog requirements are listed in a separate section

  17. IIC. Library and Learning Support • Need to have sufficient library, computer lab, tutoring and other services as evidenced by regular assessment • Must have “comparable services” online and at off-site locations, plus adequate access • Must address information competency and assess the students

  18. Changes in New Standards • IIC is folded into IIB • May or may not indicate a de-emphasis on libraries and learning centers • May reflect difficulty in finding librarians to serve on teams • CCL has protested the change

  19. Standard III. Resources • Technically, not under the CIO area and CIOs would rarely be assigned to this standard • Human Resources: should make sure faculty hiring follows a process and all faculty meet MQs • As CIO, responsible for regular evaluation of all faculty

  20. The Big Issue • Current standard: “Faculty…have, as a component of their evaluation, effectiveness in producing…learning outcomes.” • What are the ways to address this? • New standards: “The evaluation of faculty, academic administrators, and others….includes, as a component…consideration of the effectiveness of producing [student learning].”

  21. Must have a “sufficient number of qualified faculty” – will your faculty agree? • Must have a process to identify and deliver appropriate professional development for faculty, and evaluate what is provided • Must show impact of professional development

  22. Physical and Technology Resources: How are needs identified, funded and evaluated? How are allocations connected to college goals and student learning needs? • Is technology sufficient for identified student needs? • Contractual agreements, particularly with non-accredited entities

  23. Policies and ERs • DE Policy • Transfer of Credit • Contractual Relationships • ERs: Are often cited in sanctions

  24. The Big Picture/Wrap Up

  25. Meridith’s Advice • Whatever your process is for planning, assessing SLOs, resource allocation, etc., make sure you can produce DOCUMENTS and show that the process is evaluated regularly and results in changes. • Make sure (almost) everyone can tell the team what the processes are AND that they had opportunity for input. Keep evidence that employees were given chances to comment.

  26. And…. • If you come through a visit with sanctions, it will likely be your fault as the ALO….. • But if you are successful, there will be “too many people to thank” • Just accept it….

More Related