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Academic Quality Improvement Project (AQIP), a new form of accreditation at Eastern Iowa Community College District: a qualitative analysisBrua-Behrens, Nicole Susan 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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STATE HIGHER EDUCATION AGENCY RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE EVALUATION AND ACCREDITATION OF PUBLIC FOUR-YEAR INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER EDUCATIONBirch, Garnet Elmer January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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Accrediting societies and higher education the impact of federal regulation, 1944-2008 /Cothrum, Carrie Elaine. January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Texas Christian University, 2009. / Title from dissertation title page (viewed June 2, 2009). Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references.
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The benefits to the small Bible College of achieving accreditation through the Transnational Association of Christian Colleges and SchoolsMelton, Bruce. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary, 2000. / Includes bibliographical references.
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AN ASSESSMENT OF EVALUATION TEAMS IN REGIONAL ACCREDITATION OF BACCALAUREATE-GRANTING INSTITUTIONS.SILVERS, PHILIP JOSEPH. January 1982 (has links)
The purpose of this research was to provide a descriptive and critical analysis of the function of evaluation teams in regional accreditation of senior colleges and universities--how evaluators perceive their roles, how they spend their time on site, and how they make decisions. The objectives of the study were (1) to determine the extent to which regional accrediting visits do what they are purported to do in regional policy and procedure statements, and (2) to determine the strengths and weaknesses in the onsite evaluation process as perceived by regional evaluation team members. The methodology involved a three-step process: (1) a content analysis of regional policy statements regarding the evaluation visit, (2) a survey of evaluators from five of the six regional associations, and (3) a review and comment on the draft findings by professional staff of the participating regional commissions. An overall response rate of 82 percent was obtained from the sample of 349 evaluators--without the use of follow-up mailings. Regional cross tabulations of evaluator responses, together with Chi-square statistics and standard errors of the percentages, provided the basis for the analysis. Major conclusions of the study were: (1) The lack of clear specification of the purpose of the evaluation team visit rendered it difficult to determine whether the purported purposes of the visit were being met. (2) The major strengths of the evaluation visit lay in the expertise and dedication of the volunteer evaluators, and in the willingness of the commissions to adapt their procedures to changing needs and new technologies. The major weakness in the evaluation visit was the lack of an evaluation framework or model to guide the work of the evaluation team. The researcher's recommendations included (1) the regional commissions should clearly specify the intended purposes of the evaluation visit in light of the overall purposes of regional accreditation, and (2) the regional commissions should utilize a coordinating group such as the Council on Postsecondary Accreditation and the evaluation expertise within academe to develop a framework, or genre, to guide team members in accomplishing the purposes of the visit.
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History of the inclusion of the governing board concept as a requisite for accreditation in the Commission on Colleges, Southern Association of Colleges and Schools: Implications for policy formulationUnknown Date (has links)
"To a great extent, lay governing boards and accreditation have become part of the philosophical tenets in higher education. Yet little is known about the historical forces that brought accreditation and the governing board concept together. This study focused on the history of the criterion governing board as used by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. The major data collection method used in this historical-critical research was documentary search. The format of the organization of this research combined a chronological and thematic approach"--Abstract. / Typescript. / "Spring Semester, 1992." / "Submitted to the Department of Educational Leadership in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy." / Advisor: Louis Bender, Professor Directing Dissertation. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Restoring accreditation in two private Texas historically Black collegesJones, Brontè Denise 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Self-efficacy and the recognition of prior learningRudman, Neville January 2007 (has links)
The Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL), a mechanism grounded in the educational transformational policies of the African National Congress to redress the historical legacy of Apartheid, is a relatively new (and often contested) concept in South Africa. This research endeavors to investigate the effect of a module, which forms part of a B.Ed (upgrade) programme and is based on the processes and principles of RPL, on students’ (in-service teachers’) self-efficacy and their skills in terms of the development and execution of work schedules and lesson plans (the RPL-focus of the module). The methodology includes the gathering of quantitative and qualitative data through the administering of pre- and post- self-efficacy questionnaires, assessment of the portfolios of evidence produced by the students, and the feedback obtained from the focus-group interviews. The data indicate a statistically significant improvement in the participating students’ self-efficacy and draw attention to the negative issue of context in previously disadvantaged South African schools. The significance of this research lies not only in the interrogation of an innovative approach to dealing with RPL issues in an academic programme, and its possible influence on teacher self-efficacy, but also in its contribution to the academic debate about the RPL process which is currently taking place both locally and internationally.
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The relationship of the NCATE standards to the accreditation decisionRoland, Edgar Allen January 1987 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) standards and certain institutional characteristics in the accreditation decision. Nine teacher education programs were investigated: three programs at the baccalaureate level (Elementary Education, Secondary Education, and Special Education), and six programs at the master's level (Elementary Education, Secondary Education, Special Education, Reading, Elementary/Secondary Principalship, and Counselor Education). A three step statistical analysis was conducted for the nine programs. In the first step, the ratings given the standards for each program by the visiting teams were normalized by applying the Van der Waerden normal scores procedure. In the second step of the analyses, the Pearson product—moment correlation coefficient (r) was computed between the accreditation decision and each of the standards and certain institutional characteristics for each program. In the third step, those standards and institutional characteristics which correlated .20 or greater with the accreditation decision were entered simultaneously into a regression model. Those variables that did not contribute significantly to R square (alpha=.l0) were subsequently removed, resulting in a "restricted" regression model containing only those variables which were statistically significant contributors to the accreditation decision. / Ph. D. / incomplete_metadata
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Recognition of prior learning and assessment of adult learners : considerations for theory, policy and practice.Naidu, Sundrasagren. January 2004 (has links)
As part of the transformation agenda of education and training policy, the
main thrust of Recognition and Prior Learning (RPL) in the South
African policy context was to contribute to addressing social justice
issues such as equity, redress and access of the majority of adult learners,
who were historically denied access to formal learning. The study focuses on the following critical questions: What are the official policy claims of the assessment and recognition of prior learning at the national and sectoral level? How do assessors mediate official policy in recognising and assessing
prior learning of adult learners in an institutional context? What are the experiences and engagements of adult learners in having their prior learning assessed?
This research responds to the conceptual gaps in the study of RPL
policy and practice and the National Qualifications Framework. The
study examines epistemological issues such as: what and whose
knowledge is considered as valid; the relationship between knowledge
and experience; the relationship between different types of knowledge
and learning; and the relationship between knowledge and access to power.
The study also addresses a contextual gap: very limited research exists
on the RPL experiences of societies in transition with similar transformational agendas as South Africa.
The present research study also examines the implementation process
in a transitional context, exploring the gap that develops between
intended policies and actual practice.
This is a qualitative study using the case study approach to examine the
complexities of the assessment and recognition of prior learning process
in a Technical College Institution located in the Further Education and Training Band.
The analysis of selected international case studies of RPL contributed to
identifying and exploring conceptual gaps in RPL policy and practice.
These conceptual issues provided the first set of preliminary lens for the
production, description and analysis of data in the research study. The
preliminary lens were then re-interpreted and elaborated in relation to
Bernstein 's theory (1996) of symbolic control and cultural production.
reproduction and change. The synthesised conceptual framework
provided a theoretical vocabulary to redescribe and reinterpret data at
deeper levels of abstraction.
The key findings of the research were as follows:
The undertheorisation of RPL in policy circles and the ways in which
policy has tended to gloss over issues such as "equivalence",
"integrated competence", knowledge-power dynamics and the
differences between mainstream and outsider knowledge;
The gap between policy rhetoric and sectoral practice. The sector
advocated a technicist approach to RPL that was preoccupied with
matching adult experiential learning against prescribed standards.
The sector practice marginalized or even excluded adult learners who
had acquired their knowledge and learning in non-formal and
informal contexts;
Nevertheless, assessors who were socially and culturally sensitive to
the RPL process had an implicit understanding of the different types
of knowledge and knowers. Their developmental approach to RPL provided an enabling environment for adult learners to demonstrate
their learning and knowledge from experience.
Adult learners without high levels of formal literacy were able to
demonstrate their ability to reflect on their experiential learning to
transfer their abstract and critical thought processes to solve new
problems in the assessment context. The research highlights the
commensurability between informal and formal knowledge and the
ability of workers who have learnt their skills informally to
demonstrate high levels of conceptual and transferable skills.
The present research makes the following theoretical contributions:
Firstly , Bernstein's theory was extended to examine policy formulation
and the policy process. Within the framework of critical policy analysis,
a new construct: "relations outside" was created as an analytical tool to
examine the nuances of the macro-contexts (historical, political, social,
economic) which shape the meaning and significance of policy.
Secondly, the research study produces a new conceptual framework to
analyse the complex and dynamic nature of RPL policy and practice in a
transformational context.
The present study advocates a critical and holistic approach to RPL
that interrogates how power-relations within and across contextual,
epistemological and pedagogical issues reproduce or challenge the
existing patterns of inequalities in society. / Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of Durban-Westville, 2004.
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