January 2002
The Mason Gazette


Final Steps to Reaccreditation for SOM

By Michelle Nery

A peer review team will visit the School of Management (SOM) on Sunday, Feb. 17, in the final step to reaccreditation by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB International). During its visit, the team will tour the campus and talk to faculty, students, and the business community to validate the content of the self-evaluation report submitted by the school and its Accounting Program in August. SOM and the Accounting Programs were originally accredited in 1989. Only about 10 percent of the 3,000 management programs in the United States are accredited.

The AACSB International accreditation process evaluates based on self-evaluation and peer review. In the self-evaluation process, a school assesses its accomplishments in relation to its mission and objectives, as well as according to the criteria in the accreditation standards. The peer review is an external analysis of a school’s processes for achieving its mission, assessing educational outcomes, and planning for continuous improvement.

Key areas of review by AACSB International include the school’s mission, faculty composition, undergraduate and graduate curriculum, the university’s and the school’s individual resources, the student body, and the intellectual contribution of faculty members to their discipline.

“The reaccreditation process provides us with the opportunity to pause and reflect on where we’ve been, what we’re doing, and where we are going in the future,” says David Harr, associate dean for undergraduate programs. “We can evaluate what processes work and what don’t and can determine how to modify those processes.”

This process is a déjà vu of sorts for professors Ken Heller and Phillip Buchanan who were co-authors of the first self-evaluation report for the Accounting Program and who contributed, along with a group of other SOM faculty, to the production of the current five-volume package making up the self-evaluation report. “We were here when we got the initial business accreditation 10 years ago. It was a lot of work but well worth the effort,” says Buchanan. “It was enlightening to go through the process,” says Heller, “because you can see what you are good at and what you’re not and make improvements going forward.”

Since Heller and Buchanan worked on the first report, AACSB International has changed its accreditation standards and procedures from a quantitative, one-size-fits-all model to a new mission-linked standard designed to support institutional diversity in management education.

Accreditation for SOM and the Accounting Program is crucial for students, faculty, and businesses. “When we’re recruiting students, the accreditation really matters,” says Buchanan. “It is very important in terms of making our students competitive in the job market, especially for M.B.A. graduates and employers. It has also helped us in recruiting faculty. We wouldn’t be able to hire the quality faculty that we have if we were not accredited.”