Criteria for Accreditation
The Higher
Learning Commission has articulated five criteria, which
define necessary attributes an institution must exhibit to be
accredited. Each criterion contains related core components.
Below are the criteria statements and the associated core components:
Criterion One: Mission and Integrity.
The organization
operates with integrity to ensure the fulfillment of its mission
through structures and processes that involve the board, administration,
faculty, staff, and students.
- 1a. The organization's mission documents are clear and articulate
publicly the organization's commitments.
- 1b. In its mission documents, the organization recognizes the
diversity of its learners, other constituencies, and the greater
society it serves.
- 1c. Understanding of and support for the mission pervade the
organization.
- 1d. The organization's governance and administrative structures
promote effective leadership and support collaborative processes
that enable the organization to fulfill its mission.
- 1e. The organization upholds and protects its integrity.
Criterion Two: Preparing for the Future. The
organization's allocation of resources and its processes for evaluation
and planning demonstrate its capacity to fulfill its mission, improve
the quality of its education, and respond to future challenges and opportunities.
- 2a. The organization realistically prepares for a future shaped
by multiple societal and economic trends.
- 2b. The organization's resource base supports its educational
programs and its plans for maintaining and strengthening their
quality in the future.
- 2c. The organization's ongoing evaluation and assessment processes
provide reliable evidence of institutional effectiveness that
clearly informs strategies for continuous improvement.
- 2d. All levels of planning align with the organization's mission,
thereby enhancing its capacity to fulfill that mission.
Criterion Three: Student
Learning and Effective Teaching. The
organization provides evidence of student learning and teaching
effectiveness that demonstrates it is fulfilling its educational
mission.
- 3a. The organization's goals for student learning outcomes
are clearly stated for each educational program and make effective
assessment possible.
- 3b. The organization values and supports effective teaching.
- 3c. The organization creates effective learning environments.
- 3d. The organization's learning resources support student learning
and effective teaching.
Criterion Four: Acquisition,
Discovery, and Application of Knowledge. The organization promotes a life of learning
for its faculty, administration, staff, and students by fostering
and supporting inquiry, creativity, practice, and social responsibility in ways consistent with its mission.
- 4a. The organization demonstrates, through the actions of its
board, administrators, students, faculty, and staff, that it
values a life of learning.
- 4b. The organization demonstrates that acquisition of a breadth
of knowledge and skills and the exercise of intellectual inquiry
are integral to its educational programs.
- 4c. The organization assesses the usefulness of its curricula
to students who will live and work in a global, diverse, and
technological society.
- 4d. The organization provides support to ensure that faculty,
students, and staff acquire, discover, and apply knowledge
responsibly.
Criterion Five: Engagement
and Service. As called
for by its mission, the organization identifies its constituencies
and serves them in ways both value.
- 5a. The organization learns from the constituencies it serves
and analyzes its capacity to serve their needs and expectations.
- 5b. The organization has the capacity and the commitment to
engage with its identified constituencies and communities.
- 5c. The organization demonstrates its responsiveness to those
constituencies that depend on it for service.
- 5d. Internal and external constituencies value the services
the organization provides.
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