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| Table
1 General Findings: CHEA Accrediting Organizations Operating Outside the U.S. |
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Number of Accreditors Operating Outside the
U.S.
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Number of Institutions and Programs
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Number of Separate Principles, Guidelines
or Standards
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| National |
5
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84
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4
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| Regional |
7
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160
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6
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| Specialized |
22
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111
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5
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| Totals |
34
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355*
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15
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| *Some accreditors indicated that they were engaged in international activity, but did not stipulate numbers of institutions or programs; this is likely an undercount. | |||
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Survey
Questions and Responses**
**Eight accreditors are engaged in two types of international activity
and are counted twice, once for each type of activity.
(See Table 5.)
CHEA participating organizations were asked these questions about institutions and programs operating internationally:
Do you accredit U.S. institutions or programs (site or virtual) operating
outside the U.S.? (If so, how many and where?)
Do you accredit non-U.S. institutions or programs (site or virtual)
operating
Have you developed principles, guidelines or standards concerning accreditation
review of institutions or programs (site or virtual) outside the U.S.?
Do you accredit U.S. institutions or programs (site or virtual) operating outside the U.S.? (If so, how many and where?)
Seventeen of 55 accreditors participating in CHEA (30.9%) accredit U.S. institutions or programs operating outside the U.S.:
These 17 organizations accredit 178 U.S. institutions and programs operating outside the U.S.:
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| Table 2 | |||
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Organizations Accrediting U.S. Institutions
or Programs Outside the U.S. |
# of Institutions
and Programs |
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| National |
3
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22
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| Regional |
6
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148
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| Specialized |
8
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8
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| Totals |
17
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178
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Do you accredit non-U.S. institutions or programs
(site or virtual) operating in the U.S.? (If so, how many and where?)
One regional organization accredits two non-U.S. institutions and programs operating in the U.S.
Do you accredit non-U.S. institutions or programs (site or virtual) operating outside the U.S.? (If so, how many and where?)
Twenty-four of 55 of accreditors participating in CHEA (41.8%) are accrediting non-U.S. institutions or programs operating outside the U.S.:
These 24 organizations accredit 175 institutions and programs:
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| Table 3 | |||
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Organizations Accrediting Non-U.S. Institutions
or Programs Outside the U.S. |
# of Institutions
and Programs |
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| National |
5
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62
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| Regional |
2
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10
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| Specialized |
17
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103
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| Totals |
24
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175
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Have you developed principles, guidelines and standards concerning accreditation review of institutions or programs (site or virtual) outside the U.S.?
Fifteen of 55 CHEA accreditors (27.2%) have developed principles, guidelines or standards for review of institutions or programs outside the U.S.
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| Table 4 | |||
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Separate Principles, Guidelines or Standards
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| National |
4
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| Regional |
6
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| Specialized |
5
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| Totals |
15
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Several of the regional accreditors use the Council on Postsecondary Accreditation's (COPA) Principles of Good Practice in Overseas International Education Programs for Non-U.S. Nationals (1990). Other regional as well as national and specialized accreditors have developed their own principles, guidelines or standards. Some of the 15 accreditors indicated that they had separate principles, guidelines or standards but did not describe them.
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| Table
5 CHEA Organizations Reported Accrediting Activity in 65 Countries* |
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1. Australia |
23. Hungary 24. Iceland 25. India 26. Ireland 27. Israel 28. Italy 29. Jamaica 30. Japan 31. Kenya 32. Korea 33. Kuwait 34. Malaysia 35. Mexico 36. Monaco 37. Mongolia 38. Morocco 39. Netherlands 40. New Zealand 41. Nigeria 42. Norway 43. Pakistan 44. Panama |
45. People's Republic of China 46. Peru 47. Philippines 48. Poland 49. Portugal 50. Romania 51. Russia 52. Saudi Arabia 53. Scotland 54. Singapore 55. South Africa 56. Spain 57. Sweden 58. Switzerland 59. Taiwan 60. Tanzania 61. Thailand 62. Trinidad 63. Turkey 64. United Arab Emirates 65. Zimbabwe |
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| *Some accreditors chose not to indicate countries in which they operate. | |||
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Discussion
While data on prior international accreditation activity is not available, the results of the survey suggest a considerable current interest in international quality assurance activity, with 34 organizations accrediting 355 institutions and programs in 65 countries. And, anecdotal information and frequent queries from accreditors indicates that this is growing: more U.S. institutions and programs are seeking to operate internationally and more non-U.S. institutions are interested in obtaining U.S. accreditation.
The survey results can also be evaluated in light of what CHEA learned from its invitational International Seminar held in January 2000. Fifty (50) people from 10 countries attended this meeting held in Washington, D.C. The purpose of the seminar was to exchange information about international quality assurance, to identify important issues for future consideration and to lay a foundation for ongoing communication. A summary of the seminar may be found on the CHEA website at www.chea.org.
The issues and concerns raised at the seminar strongly suggest that U.S. accreditors will be asked to expand their international role in the future and to work more closely with quality assurance leaders around the world. For example, seminar participants are seeking additional information about quality assurance practices and accreditation from a variety of countries. They want new and expanded means to communicate and affirm the quality of institutions and programs offered internationally. They want to jointly address good practices in quality review. They are seeking strategies to address distance learning. Quality assurance leaders from countries outside the U.S. want additional information about the complex and diverse U.S. accreditation enterprise. U.S. accreditors expressed their need to learn more about the quality review practices in other countries.
Where does this leave us? John Petersen, author of the CHEA Occasional Paper Internationalizing Quality Assurance in Higher Education (July 1999), provides a succinct response to the international challenge facing institutions, programs and accreditors: "Higher education daily becomes more of a world enterprise. Reasonable assurance of quality and integrity is a necessity as institutions, students, academic credit, and qualifications extend beyond state, regional, and national borders," (page 13).
CHEA is responding to this challenge with several initiatives. These include development of a CHEA electronic data base of accreditation organizations and quality assurance agencies around the world, a glossary of quality assurance terms commonly used in many countries, a listing of key international agreements about quality assurance and a survey to identify major issues in international quality assurance. CHEA's goal is to effectively respond to the need for reliable information and effective communication in the international quality assurance arena.
Judith S. Eaton
President
Council for Higher Education Accreditation
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Council For Higher Education
Accreditation One Dupont Circle NW Suite 510 Washington DC 20036-1135 202-955-6126 (voice) 202-955-6129 (fax) |
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| Send comments and suggestions
to chea@chea.org Last Modified: October 7, 2002 |
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