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Southern Accreditor Places 4 Colleges on Probation

June 27, 2008

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The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools placed four colleges and universities on probation at its meeting this week and removed two others from the regional accreditor's most serious status short of withdrawing its approval.

Details about the actions by the association's Commission on Colleges will not be available until next month, when the commission makes its reports on individual institutions public. But according to Belle S. Wheelan, the commission's president, the Southern accreditor placed on probation Louisiana's Dillard University (for falling short of the group's standards on finances), Louisburg College (also for financial resource problems), the University of South Florida at St. Petersburg (for shortcomings related to student achievement and assuring that its students master college-level competencies) and Sherman College of Straight Chiropractic, for running afoul of a wide range of Southern guidelines related to integrity, academic freedom, governing board behavior, and the qualifications of its administrative and academic officers, among other things.

Officials at Louisburg said they had taken significant steps to improve the college's financial situation, which led to the Southern association placing it on warning last December, but that they still had to make progress to reassure the accreditor and get off probation by next December. “This is extremely good news for Louisburg College, but we have a lot of important work ahead of us to realize our goals of long-term financial stability and reaffirmation of our accreditation,” said the interim president, Rodney Foth.

Another institution, Paul Quinn College, in Texas, was continued on probation.

Wheelan said the Southern association also established a special committee to investigate governance concerns at South Carolina State University, which has faced charges of misspending of public funds, among other issues.

The news was better for two colleges that left the commission's list of colleges on probation. Florida A&M University, which had been on probation for a full year, and Criswell College, a religious institution in Texas, were taken off the association's list of troubled institutions.

Two other institutions, Central Carolina Community College and the University of Miami, were taken off warning status, while Hinds Community College, in Mississippi, was placed on warning status.

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Comments on Southern Accreditor Places 4 Colleges on Probation

  • don't worry
  • Posted by fred lapides on June 27, 2008 at 7:25am EDT
  • Probation is simply a warning and if a school does not go broke they will not lose accreditation, no matter what.

  • ritual displays
  • Posted by Glen S. McGhee , Dir., at Florida Higher Education Accountability Project on June 27, 2008 at 7:50am EDT
  • The wide variation found in what has been called the "country club" form of institutional assessment used here is a matter of grave concern.

    SACS own internal consistency study documents these issues (page 11, faculty qualifications):
    http://www.sacscoc.org/pdf/COC%20Research%20Project.pdf
    See the link below for more comments.

    Without the independent evaluation of accreditation processes, we will never know how truly effective this approach is.

    Without confidence in these metrics, the periodic display conducted by accrediting guilds is just that -- confidence bolstering ritual displays for public consumption and for consolidating member solidarity.

  • Long time coming
  • Posted by Martin on June 27, 2008 at 1:20pm EDT
  • This article only gives a blurb to the troubles down at South Carolina State University, but after working there for over 24 years, this is just the tip of the iceberg. Any committee of SACS who goes in and does a thorough investigation will have a field day, especially with things like adherence to admissions policies,and human resources practices, in addition to spending practices. This has been a long time coming for the only public HBCU in South Carolina. This university has attempted to operate above the law and it's high time that they be held accountable for what many will only say are troubling policies.