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Principles of Good Practice for Electronically Offered Academic Degree
and Certificate Programs
The Principles are the product of a Western Cooperative for Educational
Telecommunications project, Balancing Quality and Access:
Reducing State Policy Barriers to Electronically Delivered Higher Education
Programs. The Principles have been developed by a group
representing the Western states' higher education regulating agencies,
higher education institutions, and the regional accrediting community
Preamble
These Principles are the product of a Western Cooperative for Educational
Telecommunications project, Balancing Quality and Access: Reducing
State Policy Barriers to Electronically Delivered Higher Education Programs.
The three-year project, supported by the U.S. Department of Education's
Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education, is designed to foster
an interstate environment that encourages the electronic provision of quality
higher education programs across state lines. The Principles have been
developed by a group representing the Western states' higher education
regulating agencies, higher education institutions, and the regional accrediting
community.
Recognizing that the context for learning in our society is undergoing
profound changes, those charged with developing the Principles have tried
not to tie them to or compare them to traditional campus structures. The
Principles are also designed to be sufficiently flexible that institutions
offering a range of programs--from graduate degrees to certificates--will
find them useful.
Several assumptions form the basis for these Principles:
The electronically
offered program is provided by or through an instititution that is accredited
by a nationally recognized accrediting body.
The institution's programs
holding specialized accreditation meet the same requirements when offered
electronically.
The "institution" may
be a traditional higher education institution, a consortium of such institutions,
or another type of organization or entity.
These Principles address
programs rather than individual courses.
It is the institution's
responsibility to review educational programs it provides via technology
in terms of its own internally applied definitions of these Principles.
CURRICULUM AND INSTRUCTION
Each program of study
results in learning outcomes appropriate to the rigor and breadth of the
degree or certificate awarded.
An electronically offered
degree or certificate program is coherent and complete.
The program provides
for appropriate real-time or delayed interaction between faculty and students
and among students.
Qualified faculty provide
appropriate oversight of the program electronically offered.
INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXT AND COMMITMENT
Role and Mission
The program is consistent
with the institution's role and mission.
Review and approval
processes ensure the appropriateness of the technology being used to meet
the program's objectives.
Faculty Support
The program provides
faculty support services specifically related to teaching via an electronic
system.
The program provides
training for faculty who teach via the use of technology.
Resources for Learning
The program ensures
that appropriate learning resources are available to students.
Students and Student Services
The program provides
students with clear, complete, and timely information on the curriculum,
course and degree requirements, nature of faculty/student interaction,
assumptions about technological competence and skills, technical equipment
requirements, availability of academic support services and financial aid
resources, and costs and payment policies.
Enrolled students have
reasonable and adequate access to the range of student services appropriate
to support their learning.
Accepted students have
the background, knowledge, and technical skills needed to undertake the
program.
Advertising, recruiting,
and admissions materials clearly and accurately represent the program and
the services available.
Commitment to Support
Policies for faculty
evaluation include appropriate consideration of teaching and scholarly
activities related to electronically offered programs.
The institution demonstrates
a commitment to ongoing support, both financial and technical, and to continuation
of the program for a period sufficient to enable students to complete a
degree/certificate.
EVALUATION AND ASSESSMENT
The institution evaluates
the program's educational effectiveness, including assessments of student
learning outcomes, student retention, and student and faculty satisfaction.
Students have access to such program evaluation data.
The institution provides
for assessment and documentation of student achievement in each course
and at completion of the program.
Updated 2/20/96
This content was developed in conjuction with:
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