Fed Judge Slams ACCSC
#1
Surprise! Higher ed "quality assurance" is arbitrary. Who would have guessed?

Quote:Court Loss for an Accreditor
January 24, 2014
By Doug Lederman

A federal judge took the unusual step last week of blocking an accrediting agency's decision to strip an institution's accreditation, and the highly unusual (if not unprecedented) step of fining the agency for its action.

The ruling by the federal judge in Virginia came in a case involving a Missouri massage school, and so has remained under the radar.

But the approach the judge used in deciding the case could apply to any accreditor's review of any college, and so raises issues much more broadly for higher education quality assurance agencies, at a time when they are under broad political attack, too.

Professional Massage Training Center sued the Accrediting Commission of Career Schools and Colleges in August 2012, after the agency revoked the school's accreditation, citing concerns about the continuity of its management, the adequacy of its learning resources, and its verification of faculty qualifications. The lawsuit argued that the agency denied the massage school due process; the court had granted a preliminary injunction in September 2012 blocking the denial of accreditation, but this was the judge's first full ruling on the merits of the case.

In his ruling, Judge Liam O'Grady, of the Eastern District of Virginia, acknowledged that in line with federal court precedent, judges owe "great deference" to the decisions of accrediting agencies, as they do to administrative decisions of federal agencies. (He also stated that the standard the school must meet for winning -- that the agency's decision was "arbitrary and unreasonable" -- is "a high bar.")

But O'Grady proceeded to find the agency's analysis lacking on several counts. The judge noted that ACCSC officials had declared the school's learning resources to be inadequate while passing up an opportunity to review a nearby university library to which the school's students had been granted access as part of an agreement. "To deem the [learning resource center] inadequate without having examined it is arbitrary by definition," the judge wrote.

The judge found the accreditor wanting in the other areas, as well, concluding that the agency did not have clear standards or documented evidence for dinging the school on faculty requirements, and that the accreditor had twice previously found the school's management to be adequate. (The judge also essentially accuses the agency of being biased against the school's longtime leader.)

"To summarize, ACCSC's decision to revoke PMTC's accreditation was based on an inadequate LRS that ACCSC didn't visit, the school's reasoned flexibility in applying its own faculty experience requirements, and application of a vague standard to find the same management that had previously been adequate is now inadequate. The Court considers these bases arbitrary and unreasonable, so finds in favor of PMTC" on its due process claim.

The judge sided with the accreditor on the lawsuit's other five counts -- but the one successful claim was enough for him not only to reverse the accreditor's decision but to require it to pay damages of $429,000, the school's lost profits from the students it was unable to enroll because its accreditation was stripped, plus legal fees and costs of rehiring employees.

And rather than simply vacating the loss of accreditation, he mandated that the accreditor must renew the school's accreditation until its next normal review cycle.

Supporters of the massage school characterized the judge's decision as a "David vs. Goliath"-style victory, which a news release characterized as "stunning."

A statement from ACCSC described the agency's officials as "disappointed" by the decision, which they called "flawed in several important respects."

Lawyers who work on accreditation issues said they were surprised by the judge's willingness to substitute his own judgments for those of the accreditor, and especially for the financial penalties, which one said he believed to be unprecedented.
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#2
That's the problem with accreditation. It too often comes down to money and someone's opinion. In this case the judge saw it differently from the accreditor. I would prefer each state to decide what it will accept. I would expect that the states would get together and come up with some general guidelines to follow while still allowing for individual differences. This then becomes rule by law and not passing the buck to some small outside group to say what is good or bad. We the people would at least have some influence over what a state agency does. With these private accreditors we have no say so at all.
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