Title: Accreditation in the West Indies
1Building an Accrediting Body in the Caribbean
Organizational Meeting Chandrabhan Sharma The
University of the West Indies Moshe Kam IEEE
Educational Activities
April 2008 San Juan, Puerto Rico
Version 001
2Welcome and Introductions
3Introduction and General Aims
4History of Recent Efforts
Objectives and Goals
- March 2006 initial discussions of the future of
accreditation in the University of the West
Indies - April 2007 IEEE holds an accreditation workshop
in UWI - September 2007 IEEE holds an accreditation
training workshop in Port of Spain - Followed by a meeting of potential participants
on the creation of a new accrediting body
5Emergent Consensus
Objectives and Goals
- There is enough interest in creating an
accrediting body for engineering, technology and
computing in the Caribbean - The overall objective is high-quality, impartial
and recognized body that will become part of the
Washington Accord - We will start with programs provided in English
6Scope
Objectives and Goals
- ETC(?) programs provided in English in the
Caribbean - An effort requiring 3-6 years
- and the consent and participation of all major
constituencies - The accrediting body will replace all accrediting
activities currently conducted by external
agencies
7Desired Final Outcome
Objectives and Goals
- A fully functional stable accrediting body
operating wherever there is a higher education
institute in the Caribbean - Run by educators and practitioners from the
Caribbean - Member in the Washington Accord
8This Meeting Desired Outcomes
Objectives and Goals
- Agreement on establishment of a new accrediting
body - Develop a declaration during or after the
meeting - Establishment of an expanded Founding Committee
with subcommittees on - Accreditation model and accreditation process
- Administrative structure and finances
- Dissemination, implementation and rollout
- Establishment of preliminary timetable and
milestones
9Possible Dangers
Objectives and Goals
- Not enough interest
- Failure to include all major stakeholders
- Especially industry
- Poor finances
- Competition/meddling by outside accrediting
bodies - Political infighting
10The Plan and Objectives of this Meeting
Objectives and Goals
- including participant expectations
11Proposed Agenda Monday AM
Objectives and Goals
12Proposed Agenda Monday PM
Objectives and Goals
13Breakout Groups
Objectives and Goals
- Accreditation model and accreditation process
- Administrative structure and finances
- Dissemination, implementation and rollout
14Proposed Agenda Tuesday AM
Objectives and Goals
15Proposed Agenda Tuesday Late AM/PM
Objectives and Goals
16Parameters that Need to be Determined (1)
Objectives and Goals
- Why are we doing this?
- What is wrong in the current situation?
- Why can we not rely on external accrediting
bodies (IET, ABET)? - Who wants to do this?
- Supporters inside and outside the region
- What are the main impediments/ opposition/
obstacles?
17Parameters that Need to be Determined (2)
Objectives and Goals
- Scope
- Engineering/ engineering technology/ computing/
applied science? - Schools and programs
- BS? MS? Other degrees?
- Number of evaluators and other volunteers needed
- Accreditation philosophy
- Administration and governance
- How do we guarantee impartiality?
18Parameters that Need to be Determined (3)
Objectives and Goals
- Role of governments
- Relationships with existing laws
- Legal status and standing
- Institutional licensing
- Regional accreditation?
- Role of Industry
- As participants, as financial contributors
19Parameters that Need to be Determined (4)
Objectives and Goals
- Role of professional societies
- And who they are
- Role of international organizations
- Role of external organizations and individuals
- In governance of the accrediting body
- As evaluators and team chairs
20Parameters that Need to be Determined (5)
Objectives and Goals
- How much will this cost to establish?
- How much will this cost to maintain?
- Mock budget
21Parameters that Need to be Determined (6)
Objectives and Goals
- How do we achieve buy-in?
- Whose buy-in is needed?
- How do we phase the new accrediting body in?
- Time table and Milestones
- Opportunities for collaboration
22What Parameters or Issues Have We Missed?
Objectives and Goals
23Charging the Breakout Groups
Breakout group charge
24Accreditation Model and Accreditation Process
Breakout group charge
25Accreditation Model and Accreditation Process (1)
Breakout group charge
- Scope
- Which programs? Which degrees?
- Accreditation philosophy
- Available options (pros and cons)
- Two most likely approaches to pursue
- Relationship with licensing
- Desired, expected
26Accreditation Model and Accreditation Process (2)
Breakout group charge
- Governance
- Who is sitting in decision making capacity?
- Who is advising and observing?
- Functional (non-administrative) structure
27Accreditation Model and Accreditation Process (3)
Breakout group charge
- Structure
- Board of Directors
- Commission(s)
- Appeals committees?
- Criteria, accreditation manuals
- Training
- Advisory Boards
- International participation
- The role of regional accreditation and
institutional licensing
28Administrative Structure and Finances
Breakout group charge
29Administrative Structure and Finances (1)
Breakout group charge
- What is the administrative structure needed for
the support staff? - How much will the accrediting body cost?
- Administrative staff
- Training
- Governance
- Accreditation activities
- External evaluators/ advisors/ participants
- Transportation and communications
30Administrative Structure and Finances (2)
Breakout group charge
- Who will pay for the activities of the
accrediting body? - Schools
- Professional associations (who?)
- Governments
- Industry (who? How would we reach them?)
- What legal entity does the new accrediting body
constitute?
31Administrative Structure and Finances (3)
- Mock budget
- To start the organization
- To maintain the organization
32Dissemination, Implementation and Rollout
Breakout group charge
- Focus on TRAINING and EVALUATOR POOL
33Training and Evaluator Pool (1)
Breakout group charge
- Who will serve as evaluator?
- Who makes the selection?
- Who will serve as team chair?
- How do we guarantee impartiality and rotation?
- What is the role of evaluators from outside the
Caribbean? - And how will they be trained?
34Training and Evaluator Pool (2)
Breakout group charge
- What is the size of the evaluator pool?
- Do we pay evaluators for their work?
- What staff support would be needed?
- How do we assess evaluators?
- Including mentoring, feedback and removal
35Training and Evaluator Pool (3)
Breakout group charge
- How do we start? Who will conduct the first
training? - Who is responsible for training in the steady
state? - The accreditation body? The professional
associations? - Mock budget for training
- Initial, steady state
36Structure and Principles of Operation
- Moshe Kam
- IEEE Educational Activities Board
- Committee on Global Accreditation Activities
37What does an accrediting body do? (1)
- Establishes and maintains regulations for
accreditation - Criteria and procedures
- Establishes and maintains an administrative
structure to support the accreditation process - A pool of program evaluators
- Decision maker and committee structure
- Communication tools
38What does an accrediting body do? (2)
- Accepts and acts upon requests for accreditation
- Reviews and assesses self study and other
preparatory documents - Organizes and conducts accreditation visits
- Reviews recommendation of evaluator teams on
accreditation action - Makes and announces accreditation outcomes
39Stakeholders
- Academic institutions
- Presidents, provosts, chancellors, deans
- Industry
- Major employers of engineers, computer
scientists, and technologists - Professional associations
- Local, local sections of transnational
organizations, transnational organizations with
local sections - Governments
- Ministries of education and industry,
accreditation oversight bodies - Other Civic Organizations
40What is required of an accrediting body?
- Based on the requirements of the Council on
Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA)
41Recognition Standards the AB
- Advances academic quality
- Demonstrates accountability
- Encourages, where appropriate, self-scrutiny and
planning for change and for needed improvement - Employs appropriate and fair procedures in
decision making - Demonstrates ongoing review of accreditation
practices - Possesses sufficient resources
42Requirements from the Accrediting Body (1)
- A majority of the institutions and programs
accredited by the organization grant higher
education degrees - The recognition process will place increasing
emphasis on the effectiveness of accrediting
organizations in assuring academic quality of
institutions or programs - AB is non-governmental
43Requirements from the Accrediting Body (2)
- AB accredits institutions that have legal
authority to confer higher education degrees - AB accredits institutions or programs at
generally accepted higher education levels
44Written Public Procedures
- AB has written procedures that describe,
officially and publicly - the organizations decision-making processes,
policies, and procedures that lead to
accreditation actions - the scope of accreditation that may be granted
- evaluative criteria (standards or
characteristics) used - levels of accreditation status conferred
45Self Evaluation, Visits, Independence
- AB has procedures that include a self-evaluation
by the institution or program and on-site review
by a visiting team, or has alternative processes
that were determined to be valid - AB demonstrates independence from any parent
entity, or sponsoring entity, for the conduct of
accreditation activities and determination of
accreditation status
46AB is Operational
- AB is operational, with more than one completed
accreditation review, including - action by the accreditation decision-making body
at each degree level, or for each type of program - identified in the statement of proposed
recognized scope of accreditation
47AB Needs to Demonstrate
- a clear statement of proposed scope of
accreditation activity - a clear statement of the accrediting
organizations purposes and why those purposes
are in the public interest - a description of the accrediting organization and
its activities - the quality, pertinence, and value of those
activities - the ways in which those activities serve higher
education and the public interest
48AB must demonstrate that the statement of
proposed scope
- addresses the types of institutions, the programs
to be reviewed, degree levels, and the geographic
boundaries of accreditation activity - is consistent with organizational mission
statements, charters, bylaws, candidacy
requirements, and other requirements for
accreditation and affiliation - and the accrediting organization has had
consultation with appropriate constituencies
49Who should govern the accrediting bodies?
- Professional associations
- Academic institutions
- Industry
- Institutions from the three sectors should be
invited to become Members of the accrediting body - Voting Members in the annual/bi-annual assembly
of Members - Governments should be invited to observe and
advise -
50ABETs Corporate Structure
.
Member Societies
Board of Directors
Industrial Advisory Board
Executive Committee
COMMISSIONS
Applied Science
Engineering
Technology
Computing
Program Evaluator Teams
51The Structure of JABEE
52Possible Structure (1)
- Member Assembly
- Meets every year or every other year
- Board of Directors
- 9 members
- 3 professional associations
- 3 academia
- 3 industry representatives
53Possible Structure (2)
- Accreditation Commissions
- Engineering
- Computing
- Technology
- Program evaluators and Team Chairs
54Staff
- Executive Director
- Director of Accreditation and Training
- Assist Staff (2-3)
55Member Assembly
Board of Directors
STAFF
Engineering
Computing
Technology
COMMISSIONS
Program Evaluators
56How should the accreditation body be financed?
- Participation fees
- From professional associations and industry
- Accreditation fees
- From participating institutions
- Grants and gifts
- For special projects and research
57Accreditation Models
58Different Approaches and Styles of Accreditation
- The Minimal Model
- The Regulatory Model
- The Outcome-Based Model
- The Peer-Review model
- The Program Club model
59The Minimal Model
- Ascertains basic characteristics of the school
and program - Often numeric and law-based
- Does the school satisfy basic legal requirements?
- Does the school have enough budget,
infrastructure and reserves to conduct the
program? - Ascertains existence of the fundamental basics in
the school and program - Physical conditions, size and skill base of the
faculty, coverage of basic topics in the
curriculum - Provides a prescription for a minimal core and
very general parameters for the rest of the
curriculum
60Reflections on the Minimal Model
- It is easy to install and maintain as long as it
adheres to the minimal philosophy - Not a bad way to start an accrediting body
- Does not encourage continuous improvement
- The biggest danger is mission creep
- More and more requirements
61The Regulatory Model
- Requires strict adherence to a core curriculum
- E.g., defines the minimum requirements for a
Software Engineering curriculum - Specifies parameters for the rest of the
curriculum - E.g., at least 6 credit hours of post WWII
history - Often involving direct prescriptions of
curriculum and faculty composition - E.g., at least three faculty in manufacturing
are required if the body of students exceeds 120
62Reflections on the Regulatory Model
- Makes the accrediting process uniform and
potentially fair - Criteria are unambiguous and often numeric
- Difficult to establish and update
- Leads to endless strife over what the core
means - Relatively easy to maintain
- The key to success is adherence to clear rules
- Was shown to stifle innovation and creativity in
the curriculum - This was the philosophy of the pre-2000 ABET
model
63The Outcome-Based Model
- Prescribes a small core and basic requirements
- Prescribes basic parameters for the goals of the
program - But does not specify the specific goals of the
program - Focuses on the goals and objectives of the
program - E.g., to maximize the number of graduates who
continue to Medical or Law school - E.g., to maximize the number of graduates who
become program managers in the construction
industry - Requires evidence of measurement of goals
- Requires evidence of using the measurements to
feed a quality improvement process
64Reflections on the Outcome-Based Model
- Provides for significant diversity in goals and
objectives - Very different from the regulatory model
- Puts a lot of responsibility and risk in the
hands of the program leaders - E.g., some programs may try to achieve goals that
are unattainable - Sophisticated and hard to evaluate
- Very difficult to avoid complaints on
inconsistent evaluations - This is the basic philosophy of the current ABET
EC2000 and TC2000 criteria
65A Word of Caution Outcome-Based
Accreditation
- While outcome-based accreditation is the most
popular paradigm for accreditation, it is not
problem-free - The prescriptive nature with respect to course
content can be replaced by a prescriptive process
with respect to assessments - Too much data may be collected and analyzed in
order to prove that methods were assessed - Adherence to the process by zealous program
evaluators may cause strong disagreements about
methodology - E.g., the debate about Direct Assessment
66Collection of Data
67Use of Data for Improvement
68The Peer Review Model
- A coalition of schools organizes in group of
peers - Schools select their peers and all bi-directional
selections are accepted - Members from other constituencies are added
- Government, Industry, professional associations
- The peer groups conduct the review in evaluator
teams - Model requires an arbitrator and facilitator
- Ideally a professional association
69Reflections on the Peer Review
Model
- This is the way accreditation was done in the US
in the early 20th Century - E.g., Princeton and Johns Hopkins come to visit
the College of Engineering at Drexel University
in 1904 - Difficult to organize
- Considered less confrontational and more
collegial - Risk a drift in the direction of unpublished
mandates - Risks clashes of philosophies and program rivalry
- Selection/acceptance of peers may be painful
70The Program Club Model
- Group of peer institutions create a program
club - Use a common website for communication
- Programs that wish to join create a website with
requested information - Programs report continually on progress and
experimentation in education - New ideas are discussed and tried by members of
the club - Few on site visits
71Reflection on the Program Club Model
- Continuous accreditation model
- Difficult to organize
- Considered less confrontational and more
collegial - Risks clashes of philosophies and program rivalry
- Selection/acceptance of peers may be painful
- High maintenance
72A Note on the Use of Information Technology
- In general accrediting bodies have been slow to
make full use of modern information technology - If program data is displayed, updated and
analyzed automatically significant efforts can be
saved - The new accrediting body should strive for
maximal review and data processing that are
automatic and continuous
73Questions or Comments?