Selection Criteria For
Educational Accreditation
Opening doors to endless opportunities for academic growth and international collaboration with our globally accepted seal of excellence.
The core goal of GSAAA is to encourage educational institutions to hold themselves accountable for enhancing instruction and providing best practices through a dedication to strategic management, learner success, and influential thought leadership. This is accomplished through defining standards and criteria, coordinating audit reviews and consultations, and identifying excellent educational institutions that comply with the process and actively participate in it.
To initiate the accreditation procedure, an educational institution must fulfill the prerequisites and show that it can reasonably align with GSAAA accreditation requirements in the allotted maximum period.
Following form submission, the institute formally begins the initial accreditation process, which is led and assisted by the accreditation committee as the institute works toward accreditation. The institute is assessed for compliance with the GSAAA's accreditation standards throughout the initial accreditation process through board review and self-evaluation. The institute is subject to recurring peer assessments following accreditation to determine its long-term quality, perpetual growth, and compliance with the accreditation criteria.
The accreditation criteria consist of three sections:
Each section contains standards that, when met, lead institutes to make a positive individual impact. The combined impact across all GSAAA Council-accredited institutes moves GSAAA Council toward achieving its vision of transforming education for positive societal impact. GSAAA Council believes that a wide range of missions can be consistent with high quality, positive impact, and innovation. Such success is achieved when institutes are clear about their priorities and when their mission, strategies, and expected outcomes are internally aligned.
Strategic management encompasses the entire range of activities an educational institute engages in to fulfill its mission and informs the institute on resource management. The primary documentation is the strategic plan, which all accredited institutes are expected to have as a principal artifact for the review team to examine. The strategic plan provides a basis for the composition of the institute’s intellectual contribution portfolio, the identification of the audit committee, and the institute’s aspirations. The strategic plan identifies the institute’s mission, strategic initiatives, goals, objectives, tactics, and metrics for success and is created with input from key stakeholders. Ensuring financial vitality from an operational and strategic perspective is also critical to strategic management. Additionally, an essential component of a GSAAA Council-accredited institution is how the institute will contribute meaningfully both to connecting education with practice and to fostering and promoting societal impact consistent with the GSAAA Council’s vision. This section provides standards that guide institutes in the process of meaningful strategic management, including standards around creating and maintaining a strategic plan, managing all resources, and ensuring the overall financial health of the accredited institute or unit.
This section of the accreditation standards is designed to ensure learners' success in the degree programs and other learning experiences the institute provides. The measures in this section address these critical areas of teaching and learning. High-quality educational institutes have processes for ensuring that learners acquire the competencies to achieve successful outcomes in line with the institute's mission and develop a lifelong learning mindset to ensure continued success. These processes include curriculum and program management informed by a systematic assurance of learning. Educational institutes should have assessment processes in the portfolio of validation of learning tools that will ensure the currency and relevancy of the curriculum. Competency goals should be designed and assessed to maximize the potential for achieving expected outcomes. Teaching should be linked to competency goals, and processes should be in place to ensure faculty deliver a high-quality educational experience. Curricula and extracurricular programs should be innovative and foster engagement among learners, between learners and faculty, and with professional practice.
The defining feature of quality educational institutes is that they make a significant difference through educational activities, thought leadership, and engagement with external stakeholders. Quality educational institutes create and disseminate intellectual contributions that impact the theory, practice, and teaching and positively impact society. Often, these contributions result from engagement with the broader community that facilitates the co-creation of knowledge and ensures the relevance, usefulness, and impact of the institute’s intellectual contributions. Achieving this impact requires an institute to have a clear focus and direction for its thought leadership that aligns with its mission. Further, high-quality educational institutes have a positive societal impact by addressing broader social, economic, business, and physical environment issues, which could be at a local, regional, national, or international scale. This impact results from internal and external initiatives and aligns with educational institutes as a force for good in society. Within this context, interdisciplinary work becomes essential to achieving goals that significantly impact the community. Thus, multidisciplinary work is encouraged and applauded. This section contains two standards. The first standard focuses on the production, dissemination, and impact of the institute’s thought leadership related to scholarship. In contrast, the second assesses an institute’s engagement with and impact on society.