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Preparing for an AACSB MAC Visit

Preparing for an AACSB MAC Visit. Academic and Business Research Institute Conference Orlando, Florida September 24-26, 2009 Raymond Papp The University of Tampa. Overview. Maintenance of Accreditation (MAC) Timeline MAC Documents Fifth Year Maintenance Report Tables 2-1 & 2-2

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Preparing for an AACSB MAC Visit

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  1. Preparing for an AACSB MAC Visit Academic and Business Research Institute Conference Orlando, Florida September 24-26, 2009 Raymond Papp The University of Tampa

  2. Overview • Maintenance of Accreditation (MAC) Timeline • MAC Documents • Fifth Year Maintenance Report • Tables 2-1 & 2-2 • Tables 9-1, 10-1 & 10-2 • Personal Experiences & Observations • Best Practices • The “Goal”

  3. Maintenance of Accreditation Timeline http://aacsb.edu/accreditation/process/documents/Timeline_MAC.pdf

  4. MAC Documents

  5. Fifth Year Maintenance Report 1. Situational Analysis (no more than five pages): A brief analysis that enables the Peer Review Team to understand the context within which the applicant operates. It should answer the following types of questions: • What historical, national, local, and other factors shape the applicant’s mission and operations? • What are the applicant’s relative advantages and disadvantages in reputation, resources, sponsors, and supporters? • What internal, environmental, or competitive forces challenge the applicant’s future? • What opportunities exist for enhancing the applicant’s degree offerings? • What degree programs are included in the accreditation review, and what is the number of graduates in the previous year for each program? 2. Mission Statement: A statement that includes all degree programs defined in the scope of accreditation. 3. Strategic Management Planning Process (no more than two pages): A description of the strategic management planning process of the applicant. • Who is involved, and how do the various stakeholders influence the strategic management plan? • How are resources strategically managed?

  6. Fifth Year Maintenance Report 4. Assessment Tools and Procedures: A brief statement of learning goals for each degree program, along with a list of the assessment tools, procedures, and results used to demonstrate progress toward an achievement of the mission. What are the most recent outcomes from the assessments, and what is the impact on the program offerings relative to Assurance of Learning? 5. Financial Strategies: Description of the school’s action items and financial plans to achieve the school’s action items. This should include anticipated sources and timing of funding (see Standards 4 and 5 for definition and interpretation). 6. New Degree Programs: A list of degree programs introduced since the previous accreditation review. The following information is required for each new degree program: • A brief description of the employer or employment needs to be served by the program • A brief description of the intended student market • A description of the source(s) of faculty, technology, and facility support • A description of the learning goals, how the goals are measured, and results that demonstrate achievement. • Please note that any new degree programs started after the accreditation decision will be considered accredited until the next review. New degree programs will be reviewed during the next maintenance of accreditation review. 7. Tables: Include completed tables on faculty sufficiency and faculty qualifications or an appropriate alternative to these tables.

  7. Fifth Year Maintenance Report:Tables 2-1 & 2-2 • Table 2-1: Five-Year Summary of Intellectual Contributions • Summary by Faculty Member • Peer Reviewed Journals • Research Monographs • Books • Chapters • Peer Reviewed Proceedings • Peer Reviewed Paper Presentations • Faculty Research Seminar • Non-Peer Reviewed Journals • Others • Summary by Category • Learning & Pedagogical Research • Contributions to Practice • Discipline-Based Research • Table 2-2: Five-Year Summary of Peer Reviewed Journals and Number of Publications in Each (Optional) • Peer Reviewed Journals (PRJ) List

  8. Fifth Year Maintenance Report:Tables 2-1 & 2-2 • Table 2-1: Five-Year Summary of Intellectual Contributions • Summary by Faculty Member • Peer Reviewed Journals • Research Monographs • Books • Chapters • Peer Reviewed Proceedings • Peer Reviewed Paper Presentations • Faculty Research Seminar • Non-Peer Reviewed Journals • Others • Summary by Category • Learning & Pedagogical Research • Contributions to Practice • Discipline-Based Research • Table 2-2: Five-Year Summary of Peer Reviewed Journals and Number of Publications in Each (Optional) • Peer Reviewed Journals (PRJ) List

  9. Fifth Year Maintenance Report:Tables 9-1, 10-1 & 10-2 • Table 9-1: Summary Of Faculty Sufficiency By Discipline And School • Determine Participating or Supporting • Calculate Student Credit Hours • Table 10-1: Summary of Faculty Qualifications, Development Activities, and Professional Responsibilities • Faculty Qualifications Info • AQ/PQ Activities & Responsibilities • Table 10-2: Calculations Relative to Deployment of Qualified Faculty • AQ/PQ Percentages by faculty • AQ/PQ Percentages by department

  10. Fifth Year Maintenance Report:Tables 9-1, 10-1 & 10-2 • Table 9-1: Summary Of Faculty Sufficiency By Discipline And School • Determine Participating or Supporting • Calculate Student Credit Hours • Table 10-1: Summary of Faculty Qualifications, Development Activities, and Professional Responsibilities • Faculty Qualifications Info • AQ/PQ Activities & Responsibilities • Table 10-2: Calculations Relative to Deployment of Qualified Faculty • AQ/PQ Percentages by faculty • AQ/PQ Percentages by department

  11. Fifth Year Maintenance Report:Tables 9-1, 10-1 & 10-2 • Table 9-1: Summary Of Faculty Sufficiency By Discipline And School • Determine Participating or Supporting • Calculate Student Credit Hours • Table 10-1: Summary of Faculty Qualifications, Development Activities, and Professional Responsibilities • Faculty Qualifications Info • AQ/PQ Activities & Responsibilities • Table 10-2: Calculations Relative to Deployment of Qualified Faculty • AQ/PQ Percentages by faculty • AQ/PQ Percentages by department

  12. Personal Experiences & Observations • Hire a consultant before the visit • Provides an unbiased outside view of things • Can assist in finding errors or omissions • Get to know the visit team • Communicate early and often • Invite them to visit campus beforehand • Build a good relationship • Don’t try to hide shortcomings/problems • Be open and honest with the team • Get everyone on board (faculty, staff, students) • Develop a timeline or plan for the visit

  13. Personal Experiences & Observations • View the visit and the MAC process as positive • AACSB wants schools to be reaccredited • This is NOT an initial visit—they assume your school is doing what it needs to/should be doing • Take the visit team’s recommendations as constructive • The team just reports on findings, it does not reaccredit – the MAC committee does that • View the process as continuous improvement • Share your best practices with others & learn from them

  14. UT Best Practices(As Identified by the AACSB Visit Team)

  15. The Goal

  16. Question & Answer Raymond Papp rpapp@ut.edu The University of Tampa www.ut.edu UT Blackboard Site http://UT.blackboard.com AACSB Website www.aacsb.edu

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