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Accreditation-
10 FAQs
Q. What is accreditation?
Few
can agree on one meaning – hence the plethora
of accrediting bodies and standards. The dictionary
defines it as: “The granting of approval to
an institution of learning by an official review
board after the school has met specific requirements.”
In the United States, accreditation is an entirely
voluntary process, done by private, nongovernmental
agencies, so the term official becomes
problematic at the outset. As a result of
this lack of central control or authority, there
have evolved good accrediting agencies and bad ones,
recognized ones and unrecognized ones, legitimate
ones and phony ones. One accrediting organization
is not legally designated as being superior over
another. Consequently, the acceptance of diplomas,
transcripts, and transfer credits for students who
are home schooled or enrolled in a particular program
are according to the requirements of the receiving
institution.
Q.
What does accreditation have to do with education
and learning?
Nothing
directly. Accreditation has to do with which school
one attends, not with the student or what the individual
student has learned. Ironically, some of the
worst public schools and private schools are accredited,
as are some of the worst colleges. Some of the finest
are not – finding insufficient reason to seek
accreditation. Their good reputations precede them.
Since some accrediting bodies are established by
the same school(s) which they subsequently accredit,
the integrity of their accrediting process
is sometimes seriously compromised.
Q.
What then, is the purpose of accreditation?
Accreditation has one main function: to weed out
“diploma mills” and other assorted educational
scams – that is, most accrediting bodies have
it as one of their stated purposes to “assure
quality education,” in some manner, and
to try to give parents, students, other schools
or the government some assurance the educational
institution being reviewed is legitimate and meets
some, usually minimal, standards. How that is done
or attempted widely varies, as do the standards
used and the quality of the private accrediting
bodies themselves.
Parents and students sometimes use accreditation
as one means of determining if they wish to attend
a certain school or educational program about which
they know little. Schools and colleges sometimes
consider accreditation as a factor in accepting
transfer of credits earned at other colleges and
universities. The US Department of Education considers
accreditation as one factor in allowing Pell Grants
and other forms of student loans to be used at colleges
or universities.
Q.
What usefulness does accreditation have for an elementary
or high school level homeschool program?
The answer to this question, in our opinion, ranges
from nothing to practically nothing.
When accreditation is sought below the college level,
the primary reason is, generally, simply to provide
parents with some comfort level that the program
is legitimate (i.e., of at least some minimal
quality) – not a scam of some sort.
Some parents consider accreditation important due
to confusion and misinformation about accreditation
at the elementary and secondary level of education,
which we hope this page will help dispel.
Predictably, some schools that do seek and obtain
accreditation at the elementary or secondary level
tend to tout that fact for marketing purposes by
exaggerating its utility at that level. To
be fair, some schools, and even some accrediting
bodies, quite accurately state that the utility
of accreditation at the elementary/high school level
is simply a comfort factor for parents – assurance
by a 3rd party the program or school is neither
a scam nor a diploma mill, and meets some minimal
standards.
If a parent or student has a real concern whether
the homeschool program they are considering is legitimate
or merely a diploma mill or scam, they really need
to investigate the program more (such as read up
on it, talk to others using the program, etc.),
because if it is a scam or mill, it may
have also created its own accreditation body or
organization which has “Accredited”
it. There is no more effort in creating
a bogus program or school then there is in creating
a bogus accrediting body, as there are no federally
recognized accreditation associations for elementary
and secondary schools (that includes the six regional
accrediting associations, which are so recognized
at the college level only).
Legitimate accrediting bodies (i.e., those
making a serious attempt to determine which schools
or programs they review are good or bad
[as in diploma mills]) at the elementary
and secondary (high school) levels, each set their
own standards and criteria for making their judgments,
and are not governmentally recognized at that level.
So it is still left to parents to determine if,
in fact, the accrediting body is legitimate (a task
often more difficult than deciding if the school
is legitimate), and if they value and agree with
their standards and methods used to judge schools
and programs. For instance, some accrediting
bodies consider the teaching of creationism as an
obstacle to accreditation, others do not.
All of which begs the question: isn’t it easier
and more reliable simply to examine and judge the
school or program for oneself?
Here are the criteria often examined by accrediting
bodies (note that, having been designed for physical
colleges, very little of it has much to do with
evaluating homeschool education programs):
- Curricula
- Faculty
- Facilities,
equipment, and supplies
- Fiscal
and administrative capacity
- Student
support services
- Program
length, tuition, and fees in relation to academic
objectives
- Program
length, tuition, and fees in relation to credit
received
- Student
achievement (job placement, state licensing exams,
etc.)
- Student
loan repayments
- Student
complaints received by or available to the accreditor
- Compliance
with student aid rules and regulations Everything
else, including recruiting, admissions practices,
calendars, catalogues and other publications,
grading practices, advertising and publicity,
and so on.
Q. Is the Academy’s homeschool
program accredited?
No. There is a common misconception that homeschoolers
are actually attending a “school.” By
definition, that is not the case. Homeschooling
(perhaps an unfortunate label to define what
is better described as home education)
does not involve attending a school – in fact,
that is precisely why most parents opt for it. At
most, besides providing their particular curriculum
for use at home, homeschool programs offer
some educational counseling, minimal tutoring, and
grading. Homeschooled students attend to home, not
to a school (except as a legal fiction in some states).
As private homeschoolers, the parents are the ones
who provide "accreditation" for their
child’s education. That is to say, the quality
of home education depends, and is assured, not by
some 3rd party or accrediting body, but by the parents.
It cannot be otherwise and still be homeschooling.
Homeschooling is legal in all 50 states (subject
to various requirements in many of them).
It is scarcely credible that a parent would conduct
a scam in the education of their own children.
By its very nature, home education should be independent
of the kind of oversight by the state (or private
accrediting bodies) necessary for them to verify
that your child has completed whatever standards
you choose to use.
Since, apart from part of our online Socratic discussion
classes, students using our program are educated
at home by themselves and their parents, there is
no logical reason to seek accreditation as a school.
We are not a school. Rather, we offer a complete
homeschool program or curriculum, which parents
and students utilize to assist them with their own
home education (or homeschooling, if one
prefers that term).
Homeschool programs which boast of accreditation,
are, in most cases, simply piggybacking a separate
homeschool program onto the accreditation of a brick-and-mortar
(i.e., physical) school somewhere, which
their homeschooled students rarely if ever see,
much less attend. Besides those, there are
a few, new private accrediting bodies set up to
review independent elementary and high schools,
which may review homeschool programs. We have discovered
no sufficient reason to join these to date, which
simply offer some minimal level of “peer”
review. Some accrediting bodies have actually been
established to avoid dealing with existing accrediting
bodies considered objectionable. None are government-recognized
accrediting bodies for the elementary or secondary
level.
Q.
What about your online classes?
Our online discussion classes are different. They
are a distance education program conducted, not
by parents, but by moderators. As you may wish to
read on links on our homepage, our high school Great
Books Program was recently recommended for
college credit by the American Council on Education
(ACE) for 6 hours of college credit per semester.
Unlike accreditation at the high school level, college
credit recommendation is very meaningful for students
later moving on to one of the many hundreds of colleges
and universities which accept ACE recommended credits.
Q.
Does accreditation of a secondary (high) school
level homeschool program make courses taken from
them eligible for college credit?
No. To our knowledge, only AP (Advanced Placement)
or ACE (American Council on Education) recommended
courses would ordinarily be considered by a significant
number of colleges and universities for college
credit. Accreditation of an elementary or secondary
level homeschool program has nothing to do with
college credit. Obtaining accreditation from one
of the private elementary or secondary accrediting
bodies would not result in any college credit.
Q.
What about transferring into a public or private
high school after homeschooling for a number of
years? Does lack of accreditation affect that case?
In six years we have had one student (we know of)
decide to return to public high school. In that
case, the principal of the school took the position
that since the student had not attended an accredited
school, the school would do their own evaluation
of the educational level of the student. Using a
homeschool program accredited by some body or other
could, and probably would, have resulted in precisely
the same reaction – homeschoolers are not
appreciated by most school officials as they lose
significant revenue for each student taken from
the school system. One can therefore expect occasional,
punitive reactions from some principals, using various
excuses to justify such.
However, that is not altogether unreasonable. If
a student or parents decide to get back into the
educational establishment at the elementary or high
school level, then they will have to play by the
rules of that school. It is within the competence
of the school systems to determine where they wish
to place students in their systems, and whether
or not to accept transcripts, or require new testing
such as placement tests or SATs. etc.
In the US the county superintendent, or another
school district official, is usually responsible
for approving what will be accepted at local schools,
where such approval is needed, whether accredited
or not.
Q.
Is it necessary to have attended an accredited high
school (or high school level program) to apply to
or attend a college or university?
No. The great majority of students are accepted
into colleges based on an evaluation of their application
(the student essay has recently taken on significant
screening importance), the results of their Scholastic
Aptitude Test (SAT) or American College Testing
(ACT) scores and their high school Grade Point Average
(GPA). The high school's accreditation or non-accreditation
status is not a factor in the evaluation of a high
schoolers eligibility for college admission, except
perhaps in the increasingly rare case. A school's
accredited status from any accrediting organization
does not provide a legal guarantee that a student
will be accepted in any private or public transfer
institution. It only demonstrates the school's voluntary
self-examination assisted by an independent third
party.
A student may petition for admission to any public
education entity and request to be accepted based
on any of his transcripts, course descriptions,
attendance records, diploma, standardized test results,
and any other documentation. The student may also
request to subject himself to standardized academic
tests to confirm his mastery of the subject area(s)
that he claims to have mastered, at the grade/education
level or competency he claims to have achieved.
Perhaps 20-25 years ago, colleges and universities
did consider the accreditation status of the applicant's
high school. But few now. Why not? The answer may
be summed up in one word: homeschooling. Because
of the growing number of homeschooled students that
are applying for college admission, as well as the
fact that the best colleges and universities across
the country are actively recruiting homeschooled
students, the accreditation issue is moot in the
college admission process (there may be and probably
are a few remaining exceptions to this). The ever-increasing
numbers of homeschooled students (up to 2.1 million
now) and the demonstrated quality of their education
documented in the eloquence of their application
essay, their stellar achievements in a wide variety
of extracurricular activities, and in their outstanding
SAT and ACT scores and GPAs have required nearly
all colleges and universities to eliminate school
accreditation as a criteria in their admission policies.
Keep in mind, virtually all public schools
are accredited or certified by one entity or another
- and colleges well know such accreditation guarantees
absolutely nothing – it is truly meaningless.
Q.
Does accreditation of a college or university have
any more importance than it has for elementary or
high schools or homeschool programs?
Yes. Accreditation of colleges and universities
(rather than of elementary and high schools and
homeschool programs, which we have discussed above),
has some important, though indirect, benefits:
1. The US Department of Education will not approve
student loans to attend most non-accredited colleges
and universities. So if one is anticipating applying
for a student loan, one probably ought to select
an accredited college or university. Here again,
even the accrediting body may be bogus, so one has
to make sure the accreditation is accepted by the
US Department of Education (such as by one of the
six regional college accrediting bodies or the American
Academy of Liberal Education).
2. Foundations sometimes will not consider grants
to non-accredited colleges or universities. This
is, of course, largely irrelevant to parents or
students.
3. There are a number of bogus colleges and universities
– diploma mills - with which parents and students
are completely unfamiliar and cannot easily discover
much about. A serious college level accreditation
review by a legitimate review team can certainly
weed out the worst of the lot, to be avoided.
4. Students often transfer from one college or university,
or later select a graduate or postgraduate program
at a college or university different from the one
initially attended. Naturally, they want their credits
from the original college or university accepted/transferred
to the latter one. Colleges and Universities, with
few exceptions, are entirely free to accept or reject
transfer of credit for courses taken elsewhere,
and very often reject some or all of the college
level work done elsewhere. In making their decision
about whether or not to accept transfer of credits
from another college or university, accreditation
is one factor often considered. However, there
is no predicting this, as standards and methods
vary widely. It is up to the individual college
or university to accept or reject official records
from another school or program, based on their own
internal policy. It is definitely best to
check with the particular colleges and universities
one plans to attend to determine what their transfer
of credits policy is, before one invests much time
and treasure at one, hoping to transfer later.
Simply assuming one can freely transfer credits
from one college to another has often resulted in
serious disappointment. Even different departments
in the same university often have different transfer
of credits policies and standards. It is not
something one should leave to guesswork, if one
can avoid that.
SUMMARY
Our Academy homeschool curriculum is used in all
50 states, and in over 30 foreign countries by thousands
of students. It can fairly be said, and we
often hear, that parents and students widely regard
it as the most serious and academically challenging
(and rewarding) of homeschool programs available.
You may judge that for yourself. It is fairly
easy to find parents or students familiar with our
program (now in its sixth year), and we have literally
hundreds of pages of information, testimonials and
articles on our approach online at our website.
Our materials are, for the most part, from major
publishers and include as a core the well-known
great classics of literature. We believe seeking
some form of accreditation for our elementary or
high school level program – particularly since
it is intended for home education - would
be a waste of our time and provide parents with
nothing worthwhile. Recall that the existing accreditation
of public schools, and many private schools, is
completely meaningless from the point of view of
authentic, worthwhile education.
On the other hand, accreditation of colleges and
universities does have some indirect relevance and
utility, for them, listed in four points, just above.
There are a number of problems with the accreditation
process in the US, even at the college level –
such as the tendency to uniformity and to stifle
creativity and new educational approaches and technologies
(such as online education). But none of this
has any bearing or relevance to our seeking some
form of accreditation, or not, at the elementary
or secondary level, for what is a home education
program.
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With respect to our online classes, we decided that
obtaining the recommendation of the American Council
on Education for college credit was worthwhile for
our students, and made sense, since moderators,
not parents, do conduct those classes online.
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The Academy expressly makes no claims regarding
the acceptance of our diplomas, courses or transcripts
by any specific state or public school district,
state, government agency, community college, private
or public transfer institution, parent, military
branch, or any other organization. Information concerning
the acceptance of our diploma, courses and/or transfer
credits should be directed to the admissions official
at the public or private transfer institution well
in advance, prior to seeking enrollment in their
institution or programs. Parents enrolling their
students in the Academy homeschool program still
need meet all applicable local and state homeschooling
requirements.
Helpful
information on local homeschooling laws may be obtained
at:
In the US: http://www.hslda.org/laws/default.asp
In Canada: http://www.hslda.ca/provlaws.asp |
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