| December 2011 News from CEA |
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Message from the 2011 Commission Chair Rebecca Smith-Murdock We knew it was coming. We began preparations. And it has come. In December 2010, the U.S. President signed into law the Accreditation of English Language Training Programs Act, Public Law. 111-306. As a consequence, all English language training schools currently SEVP certified, are required to attain accreditation in order to continue to issue I-20s. The application deadline was December 14, 2011. On December 14, 2011, CEA had more than 160 English language programs and institutions at various stages in the application and self-study process. This is in contrast to the 40 that have typically been in the application and self-study process at any point of time in the past. Message from the 2011 Commission Chair (continued)
By December 2013, those English language institutions impacted by the new law must have completed the accreditation process—a self study, site, visit, and Commission evaluation. Obviously, there will be an enormous spike in the CEA workload for the next two years with large numbers of site-visits and accreditation decisions to be made. Also, there will be a permanent upward change in the workload for both commissioners and staff in terms of reports to be reviewed. To prepare for these changes, at the December 2011 meeting the CEA Commission and staff spent several hours in forward planning activities and took action to prepare appropriately so that the influx of new work will not change CEA’s emphasis on and maintenance of its mission, values and standards. Some of the changes required to keep CEA effective, efficient, and rock-solid include the following:
We knew it was coming: A permanent change in the landscape for English language schools and their accrediting bodies has been made. And CEA has made itself ready by finding positive ways to address both the temporary and permanent consequences of the growth while remaining standards- based a leader in terms of best practice in language teaching and administration, and a strong proponent of an accreditation experience that focuses on continuous improvement protocols and the value of the self-study process itself. CEA was lauded for its strong policies and procedures and its monitoring of accredited sites. There were several issues that the Commission had to address, primarily due to changes in recognition requirements as a result of changes to accreditation requirements in the Higher Education Opportunity Act and to which CEA did not previously need to respond. Two changes that accredited programs and institutions will note include 1) a more robust annual reporting process and a reversion back to the requirement that all substantive changes be reported prior to the changes taking place. Accredited sites will see the changes in the current annual report materials that were emailed this month. Multiple-site programs governed by a college or university have a main campus location, which has general oversight responsibilities for any additional locations. Independently operated multiple-site language institutions generally have an administrative headquarters, where principal executive and management responsibilities are conducted, or a main campus, an operational facility that provides both administrative and instructional services and has oversight of additional locations. Additional locations may be either branches or auxiliary locations and depend on the administrative headquarters or the main campus. A branch is a full-service instructional site that is under the same supervision or ownership (administrative headquarters or main campus); is geographically apart from the administrative headquarters or main campus; offers a full instructional program; has its own faculty; offers an array of student services, including but not limited to orientation, advising, and student activities; and must be separately accredited. An auxiliary location is a classroom-only site close to an administrative headquarters, main campus, or branch. An auxiliary operates under the same authority and administrative control of an administrative headquarters, main campus, or branch; may be permanent or temporary; may offer a full or partial instructional program; have faculty that teach at other locations; may have no or limited administrative staff; and is not separately accredited. For more information, consult CEA’s Policies and Procedures. Granted 5-year Initial Accreditation Granted 1-year initial accreditation Granted 9-year continued accreditation Three new commissioners begin their service on the Commission in January 2012: Nicolas Ferdinandt (CESL, University of Arizona), Christine O’Neil (English Language Institute, University of Pittsburgh) and Tom Scofield (ELS, San Diego). Their challenge will be to help shepherd CEA through a period of rapid growth while maintaining the integrity of the CEA review process. Initial Accreditation |

