
AdvancED is the parent organization of NCA CASI, SACS CASI, and NSSE
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"The capacity of any organization to improve is directly related to its ability to recognize, acknowledge, and act on its strengths and limitations. The District Accreditation process provides a vehicle for assisting school systems to effectively identify their strengths and areas needing improvement, as well as for providing external experienced professionals who, through a structured onsite visit, assess the capacity of the system to meet the criteria for accreditation, commend worthy accomplishments, and recommend strategies that hold the promise of important systemic improvements."
AdvancED District Accreditation is a powerful systems approach to improving student performance results and organizational effectiveness over time. District Accreditation recognizes that increasing student achievement involves more than improving instruction. It is a result of how well all the parts of the education system-the district, school, and classroom-work together to meet the needs of students.
District Accreditation applies the three pillars of accreditation-high standards, continuous improvement, and quality assurance-to the entire district to ensure alignment and support between and among the district and its schools. The District Accreditation process provides the district and all of its schools with a comprehensive framework for continually improving student achievement and district performance.
For the purposes of District Accreditation, a district may include school districts or systems, school corporations, diocesan school systems, or tribal school coalitions. Coalitions of unrelated schools joined together for the purpose of school improvement may be considered districts based on review by AdvancED.
AdvancED Accreditation Standards for Quality School Systems
The AdvancED Accreditation Standards for Quality School Systems form the foundation of District Accreditation. The standards build on NCA CASI and SACS CASI district accreditation standards. They are tightly aligned with the research on the factors that impact student performance and were developed with broad input from practitioners and education experts. The standards apply to school systems within the 30-state region of NCA CASI and SACS CASI.
What is the difference between District Accreditation and School Accreditation?
Accreditation has historically focused on individual schools. Most often, each school has determined whether it would engage in accreditation, which goals it would pursue, and what evidence would be used to determine success. Only recently has the district been perceived as a key leverage point for school improvement. Research now reveals that a school district is uniquely positioned to lead and support effective improvement of each of its schools.
Building on this research, AdvancED has developed an accreditation process specifically designed for school districts. The process invites school districts and their stakeholders to collaborate in reviewing the quality of the district’s systems, the success of each individual school, and their collective contribution to student learning and overall district effectiveness.
What are the benefits of District Accreditation?
District Accreditation is not a stand-alone process; rather, it serves as an umbrella or framework that supports system-wide continuous improvement focused directly on improving learning for all students. School districts engaged in District Accreditation indicate that it is a highly effective process for meeting and exceeding federal and state accountability requirements. In addition, District Accreditation:
- Supports and enhances a common language of school improvement across content areas and grade levels, as well as across individual schools, feeder schools, and school system lines of responsibility.
- Ensures continuity and collaboration in planning for improvement anchored in a common vision for education among all of the district's schools and ensures that each school's improvement goals complement those of the school district.
- Provides the school district and community with external review and recognition for improvement efforts as well as recommendations from an external team of professionals that are designed to further the district's improvement efforts.
- Provides the school system and community with validation and recognition for improvement efforts as well as recommendations, from an external team of professionals that are designed to further the system's improvement efforts.
- Supports a system-wide approach to achieving results.
- Ensures alignment and coordination among all of the schools in the district.
- Provides an internationally recognized mark of quality for the school district and its schools, students, teachers, and the community.
District Accreditation requires commitment from the system's leadership and Board of Education. The school system must have in place or in development a quality continuous improvement planning process focused on improving student learning and commit to achieving and maintaining the following requirements:
- Meet the AdvancED standards. The AdvancED Accreditation Standards for Quality School Systems are derived from educational research and best practices. They are centered on teaching and learning and encompass all aspects of a district. The standards require that schools have a clear vision and purpose; have effective and responsive leadership; have a rigorous curriculum taught through sound, research-based methods; collect, report, and use performance results; provide adequate resources and support for its educational programs; value and communicate with stakeholders; and have a commitment to continuously improve.
- Engage in a continuous process of improvement. An accredited district is committed to being better today than it was yesterday. The district and all of its schools identify a shared vision, maintain a district-wide profile of the current reality, establish plans and assess the implementation of interventions, and document the results of their efforts to improve student learning and school/district effectiveness.
- Demonstrate quality assurance through internal and external review. Internal review involves district and school stakeholders. External review involves feedback from experienced educators from outside the district. In both cases, reviewers examine evidence to determine if the district and its schools are meeting the standards and achieving goals for improving student learning and school/district effectiveness.