News from February 03, 2025:
Atlanta College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Achieves QAHE accreditation. "The accreditation process conducted by QAHE included a comprehensive evaluation of ACLAS's academic offerings, faculty qualifications, student support services, and institutional governance."
https://www.qahe.org/atlanta-college-of-...editation/
What are those faculty qualifications? Did they only share them with QAHE? :-)
Personally, I don't care if a college/university receives QAHE accreditation. There are some universities that have QAHE accreditation and also possess real accreditation in their country. The vast majority do not. ACLAS still does not. It's the government-recognized accreditation that really counts. QAHE or ASIC is all about branding, nothing serious that would have consequences in credential evaluation and recognition.
Atlanta College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Achieves QAHE accreditation. "The accreditation process conducted by QAHE included a comprehensive evaluation of ACLAS's academic offerings, faculty qualifications, student support services, and institutional governance."
https://www.qahe.org/atlanta-college-of-...editation/
What are those faculty qualifications? Did they only share them with QAHE? :-)
Personally, I don't care if a college/university receives QAHE accreditation. There are some universities that have QAHE accreditation and also possess real accreditation in their country. The vast majority do not. ACLAS still does not. It's the government-recognized accreditation that really counts. QAHE or ASIC is all about branding, nothing serious that would have consequences in credential evaluation and recognition.