More about Northwest Association of Schools and Colleges
Founded in 1917, the Northwest Association of Schools and Colleges
is a voluntary, non-governmental organization for the improvement of educational
institutions and for the development of better working relationships among schools
and postsecondary institutions. Membership follows accreditation by either the
Commission on Colleges or the Commission on Schools.
The Northwest Association of Schools and Colleges is one of
six similar regional associations in the United States which accredits schools
and colleges. The Northwest region includes Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Nevada,
Oregon, Utah, and Washington. Control of the Association is vested in its institutional
members who meet annually in convention to transact the business of the Northwest
Association of Schools and Colleges.
Commission on Colleges. The Bylaws of the Northwest Association
of Schools and Colleges assign to the Commission on Colleges the responsibility
for evaluating and accrediting postsecondary institutions. The Commission consists
of twenty-four members plus a chair, and the executive director who is ex-officio.
The members are elected at the annual meeting for staggered three-year terms.
Provision is made for different types of institutions and the general public
to be represented on the Commission. Commissioners serve without compensation,
and those who are institutional representatives are currently active on the
faculties or staffs of postsecondary institutions.
The Commission normally meets twice a year, but various committees
meet more frequently to facilitate the Commission's work. Its day-to-day activities
are conducted by an executive director and staff.
From time to time, the Commission revises its standards for
accreditation. The leadership for these efforts comes from the Commission's
Standing Committee on Standards, Policies and Procedures. The Standing Committee,
aided by the Commission staff, prepares drafts of any standards to be considered
for revision. In many instances, the Standing Committee also seeks the assistance
of faculty members and administrators from member institutions whose expertise
is relevant to the standard(s) being revised. Once draft revisions are completed,
they are distributed for comment and suggestions to the president and accreditation
liaison officer of each member institution. The Standing Committee then further
revises the standard(s) based upon comments from member institutions. When final
drafts are prepared, they are once again distributed to member institutions
for a vote. Revised standards are "official" after a vote of affirmation
by the member institutions.
Definition of Institutional Accreditation. Accreditation by
the Commission on Colleges of the Northwest Association of Schools and Colleges
means that a postsecondary institution's own goals are soundly conceived, that
its educational programs have been intelligently devised, that its purposes
are being accomplished, and that the institution is so organized, staffed, and
supported that it should continue to merit confidence.
The initial step for the developing postsecondary institution
is to seek recognition as a Candidate for Accreditation. While candidacy does
not ensure accreditation, it is a status of affiliation with the Commission
on Colleges that indicates that an institution has achieved initial recognition
and is progressing toward accreditation. The Accreditation Procedural Guide
provides complete information on Candidate for Accreditation. A very mature,
stable postsecondary institution may submit the basic application materials
and request approval from the Commission on Colleges to bypass Candidate status
and proceed with a comprehensive self-study and evaluation for accreditation.
Maturity and stability are emphasized. Most institutions are expected to seek
Candidate status first.
When granted, accreditation is not partial. It applies to the
entire institution in operation at the time of the most recent full-scale evaluation.
It indicates that each constituent or related unit has been examined and has
been found to be achieving its own particular purposes satisfactorily, although
not necessarily all at the same level of quality.
Substantive changes initiated subsequent to the most recent
evaluation, which significantly alter the objectives, scope, or control, and/or
establish instruction at a new geographic location are not automatically included
in the institution's accreditation. Refer to Policy A-2 - Substantive Change.
Accreditation by the Commission on Colleges takes into account
and supports the diversity which exists among postsecondary institutions in
American higher education. For example, member institutions include public and
private, large and small, church-related and nondenominational, liberal arts
and vocationally oriented, residential campus and commuter campus, and highly
selective and open admission institutions. Quality cannot always be defined
in the same terms, but must be evaluated in terms of the purposes the institution
seeks to accomplish. Thus, the programs of two institutions may be quite different
and not at all comparable, even though both are accredited by the Northwest
Association of Schools and Colleges.