In order to receive and hold authorization to offer in or from
Oregon instruction or related services leading to one or more degrees, a school
must remain open to inspection at all times and continuously satisfy each of
the following standard requirements as written, except where the Commission
approves modification under OAR 583-030-0036. Standards are applicable to all
programs.
(1) Name. The school shall
use for doing business publicly a name that is consistent with its purpose and
educational programs.
(2) Control.
(a) All persons responsible for upper
management policy must be individually qualified by education, experience, and
record of conduct to assure effective management, ethical practice, and the
quality of degrees and services offered. Boards must collectively demonstrate
financial, academic, managerial and any necessary specialized knowledge, but
individual members need not have all of these characteristics. Any controlling
organization or owner is subject to this standard.
(b) Administrators shall be paid by fixed
salary and not by commission. Commission includes monetary and nonmonetary
compensation. Any portion of payment that is based on enrollment of students
recruited by the administrator or the administrator's staff is considered
payment by commission.
(c) Teachers
shall be paid by fixed salary and not by commission. Commission includes
monetary and nonmonetary compensation. Any portion of payment that is based on
enrollment of students recruited by the teacher is considered payment by
commission.
(d) Nonprofit Schools:
(A) Persons who control a nonprofit school
shall demonstrate a commitment to the school's best interest as a public
trust.
(B) A nonprofit school shall
have a published policy that is followed in practice against conflicts of
interest at all organizational levels.
(e) For-profit Schools:
(A) A school operated for profit shall
disclose fully to the Commission the specific financial interest of any
involved organization or person, except that a large group of shareholders may
be described generally. Any person or entity holding at least 5 percent of
voting or common shares in a for-profit school must be named and the percentage
of holdings disclosed. All business activities of interested organizations or
persons are subject to disclosure.
(B) All board members, administrators, or
owners of five percent or more of shares of an applicant school or parent
corporation must disclose with explanation the following:
(i) Any prior felony convictions.
(ii) Any known violations of federal
financial aid rules by a school of which the person was a board member or
employee.
(iii) Any known
violations of the policies of an accreditor by a school of which the person was
a board member or employee.
(iv)
Any previous or current ownership or administration of a school that closed or
filed for bankruptcy.
(3) Organization.
(a) The school and any parent organization
shall be organized so as to distribute responsibility clearly among positions
in a logical structure that is consistent with services offered and
qualifications needed to fulfill the duties of the positions. An individual may
occupy more than one position.
(b)
The school shall satisfy the Commission that all upper executive officers and
other administrators are individually qualified by education, experience, and
record of conduct to assure competent management, ethical practices, and
effective educational service. Unless an exception is approved by the
Commission's executive director because of sufficient compensatory
qualification, administrators above the entry level shall have experience
related to their present duties, and all administrators with authority over
academic programs shall possess appropriate degrees earned from schools that
are regionally accredited or otherwise determined by the Commission to be
acceptable.
(c) The school shall
make available to the Commission an administrator generally responsible for
school operations within the state and transaction of business with the Office.
Unless an exception is approved by the Commission's executive director because
of sufficient compensatory qualification, that administrator shall possess a
degree at least as high as any offered by the school in connection with
operations in Oregon, together with appropriate administrative
experience.
(d) There shall be an
academic officer for the entire school responsible for faculty and academic
programs offered in or from Oregon. Unless an exception is approved by the
Commission's executive director because of sufficient compensatory
qualification, that officer shall possess at least a master's degree and shall
possess a doctor's degree if the school offers any graduate or
non-baccalaureate professional degree. That officer shall have experience in
teaching and academic administration, both experiences appropriate to the
level, size, and complexity of the school.
(e) There shall be a business officer for the
entire school responsible for accounting and managerial services. Unless an
exception is approved by the Commission's executive director because of unusual
compensatory qualification, that officer shall possess at least a bachelor's
degree in a business-related field, together with appropriate administrative
experience.
(4)
Teachers.
(a) The school must obtain and keep
official transcripts for all teaching faculty.
(b) The school shall satisfy the Commission
that all teachers are individually qualified by education and experience to
give expert instruction or evaluation in their specialties. Unless an exception
is approved by the Commission's executive director because of sufficient
compensatory qualification, teachers shall be qualified for the various levels
of instruction or evaluation as described below, with degrees earned from
schools that are accredited by a federally recognized accreditor or otherwise
determined by the Commission to be acceptable.
(c) Standards applicable to specific degree
levels. A person who does not hold the appropriate level and major degree as
stated in subparagraphs (B) through (E) of this paragraph may demonstrate
qualification by showing at least 12 semester or 18 quarter credits in the
field at a level higher than the current teaching assignment combined with
appropriate professional experience in the field. Teaching experience cannot be
used to replace professional experience if this option is exercised, except for
teacher education programs.
(A) Teachers in
programs leading to degrees in the fine arts, including but not limited to art,
music, dance, cooking, theater, photography, writing and other programs
involving a significant creative element, may demonstrate qualifications with a
documented combination of academic and creative work.
(B) Standards applicable to associate degree
programs: A teacher on a faculty offering associate's degrees ordinarily shall
possess a bachelor's degree appropriate to the subject taught or evaluated,
except that compensatory nonacademic qualifications will be more readily
accepted by the Office in programs leading to occupational degrees leading to
professional licensure or the fine arts. Where the degree emphasizes transfer
courses in the arts and sciences (primarily Associate of Arts degrees), the
teacher ordinarily shall possess an appropriate master's degree.
(C) Standards applicable to bachelor's degree
programs: A teacher on a faculty offering bachelor's degrees ordinarily shall
possess an appropriate graduate degree in the field currently taught.
(D) Standards applicable to master's degree
programs: A teacher on faculty offering master's degrees ordinarily shall
possess an appropriate doctor's degree and some teaching experience, except
that up to half of the teachers in an occupational or professional degree
program may substitute for the doctorate a master's degree together with
occupational or professional licensure or equivalent certification and related
work experience. More substitutions may be permitted where the terminal degree
for teachers in an occupational or professional field is not generally
considered to be a doctorate.
(E)
Standards applicable to doctoral degree programs: A teacher on a faculty
offering doctor's degrees ordinarily shall possess an appropriate doctor's
degree and substantial graduate or first-professional teaching experience,
including experience overseeing advanced independent study or student practice,
except that the doctor's degree alone may suffice for teaching courses at the
master's level generally or at any level in the teacher's particular
subspecialty.
(F) Exceptions for
psilocybin-related programs: In lieu of meeting the requirements in OAR
583-030-0035(4)(c)(B) an applicant for registration as a teacher of an Oregon
Health Authority-approved psilocybin facilitator training program must submit
proof that the instructor is identified with a program approved by the
Authority and provide documentation that the instructor's qualifications have
been submitted to the Authority under OAR
333-333-3020(4) or OAR
333-333-3030.
(d) There
shall be sufficient numbers of teachers and so distributed so as to give
effective instructional and advisory attention to students in all programs
offered by the school.
(e) A school
having an undergraduate FTE student-faculty ratio of greater than 30:1 or a
graduate FTE student-faculty ratio of greater than 20:1 for students taught in
or from Oregon must demonstrate that students and faculty have adequate
opportunities for one-to-one interaction.
(f) A school that does not have at least one
full-time teacher resident in Oregon or directly teaching Oregon students in
each specialty must demonstrate with specific examples the adequacy of faculty
contribution to organizational integrity and continuity, to academic planning,
and to resident student development.
(g) The school shall have a faculty
development policy that continuously improves their knowledge and
performance.
(h) The school must
provide the Commission with annual data regarding turnover of full-time
teachers. The Commission may limit use of part-time teachers upon finding that
such turnover or use results in substandard education of students.
(i) The school shall demonstrate an effort
when hiring teachers to avoid dependence on its own most recent graduates. No
more than 20 percent of all applicant school teachers can hold their highest
degree from the applicant school unless fewer than 10 schools in the United
States offer the highest degree available in the field. Schools offering solely
religious degrees are exempt from this requirement.
(j) A teacher of an academic or scientific
discipline within an occupational or professional degree program (e.g.,
economics within a business program, psychology within education, anatomy
within nursing) ordinarily shall possess the appropriate degree in the
discipline rather than a non-disciplinary occupational or professional degree.
Lower-division undergraduate courses may be taught by those with
non-disciplinary degrees who have demonstrable and extensive acquaintance with
the discipline.
(5)
Credit. The school shall award credit toward degrees proportionate to work done
by students and consequent upon the judgment of qualified teachers and
examiners. Credits are generally expressed as either semester (SCH) or quarter
credit hours (QCH). One semester credit represents approximately 45 hours of
on-task student work in a semester (usually two study hours per faculty contact
hour). A quarter credit hour represents approximately 30 hours of student work
in a quarter. Credit hours earned through nontraditional learning schedules
shall have proportionate value to credit hours based on customary term lengths.
(a) Instructional methods:
(A) Credit awarded by the school shall be
based solely upon the judgment of teachers who have had extensive direct
contact with the students who receive it, with the exception of methods listed
in these rules if approved in advance by Commission's executive
director.
(B) At least one academic
year of credit toward any degree, most of it near the end, shall represent
teaching or direct evaluation by faculty members employed by the school, except
that the Commission may approve a lesser amount for an associate's
degree.
(C) Credit may be awarded
for distance learning if the school demonstrates that it has adequate methods
in place to ensure that student work is sufficient both in quality and quantity
to meet the Commission's requirements, courses are developed and taught by
qualified faculty and there will be sufficient interaction between students and
faculty and, if possible, among students. The Commission may limit or disallow
credit awarded for any type of distance learning if the school cannot
demonstrate adequate oversight and quality control measures.
(D) Transfer credit integral to the school's
approved degree curriculum may be awarded at the corresponding degree level for
academic work documented by other schools that are accredited, authorized to
confer degrees in or from Oregon, or otherwise individually or categorically
approved by the Commission. Such credit must be at a "C" grade or above, and
converted as needed from semester, quarter or nontraditional calendar
systems.
(b)
Non-instructional Methods. No more than one year of an academic program can be
completed using any combination of the non-instructional methods set forth in
subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of this paragraph:
(A) Advanced Placement credit integral to the
approved degree curriculum may be awarded in the lower-division up to a limit
of one academic year for passing examinations constructed by testing
organizations satisfactory to the Commission.
(B) Challenge examination credit as an actual
component of the approved degree curriculum may be awarded only for successful
performance on a final course examination, or on a similar test covering all
course content, given by the school in lieu of requiring class attendance. No
more than 25 percent of a program may be earned through challenge
examinations.
(C) Noncollegiate
learning integral to the approved degree curriculum may be awarded credit only
at the undergraduate level for learning validated by a student portfolio, a
credit evaluation guide issued by the American Council on Education, or a
similar criterion. Such learning must be formulated through sufficient contact
between teacher and student, communicated competently in terms of ideas (e.g.,
concept, generalization, analysis, synthesis, proof) rather than mere
description, and judged by faculty members or contracted experts demonstrably
qualified to evaluate it. Upper-division credit of this type may be awarded
only in academic fields in which the school employs its own faculty. No more
than 25 percent of an undergraduate degree program may be earned through award
of credit for noncollegiate work.
(6) Curriculum. The school shall assure the
quality of all attendant teaching, learning, and faculty-student interaction.
The curriculum shall have a structure that reflects faculty responsibility for
what is to be learned overall, as well as in each course, and thus for the
logical sequence and increasing difficulty of subjects and instructional
levels. While requirements are sometimes listed in both semester and quarter
credit hours, the Commission usually states credit hours as semester credit
hours. If quarter credits are not listed, colleges using the quarter system
should multiply the stated credits by 1.5 to obtain the correct requirement in
quarter credit hours (QCH) under quarter systems. These are the basic
requirements for different kinds of degrees available in Oregon. The
Commission's executive director may approve minor variations from these
curriculum standards in order to allow programs to operate efficiently.
(a) Undergraduate Programs. All associate and
bachelor's degrees require one year (at least 6 semester (SCH) or 9 quarter
credit hours (QCH) or equivalent alternate term credit hours) of English
composition or equivalent Commission-approved writing courses. Students may
meet this requirement by achieving a score on a nationally normed test that
would permit a waiver of English composition requirements or the award of
academic credit in English composition at an accredited college or
university.
(b) Associate's
Degrees. An associate's degree requires at least two academic years (60
semester credit hours or 90 quarter credit hours) in FTE postsecondary study.
The degree requires at least 15 SCH or 22 QCH in general education courses,
including the undergraduate English composition requirement.
(A) Associate of Arts. A full-transfer
degree, the A.A. requires two academic years applicable to B.A. or B.S. study
fulfilling baccalaureate liberal arts requirements. A major is optional. Thus,
the A.A. requires 24 SCH (36 QCH) in the liberal arts and sciences, with at
least 6 hours (9 QCH) each in the humanities, sciences, and social
sciences.
(B) Associate of Science.
A limited-transfer degree, the A.S. requires a major and two academic years
applicable to professional or technical baccalaureate study. The A.S. degree
requires 24 SCH (36 QCH) in the humanities, sciences and social sciences, or in
non-vocational courses closely related to them.
(C) Associate, Professional or Technical. A
terminal degree, the professional or technical associate's degree requires a
major (Degree title examples: Associate of Applied Arts, Associate of Applied
Science, Associate of Technology, Associate of Occupational Studies, Associate
of Business, Associate of Religion). In addition to the major requirements,
this degree requires the basic 15 SCH or 22 QCH in general education courses,
including the English composition requirement.
(c) Bachelor's Degrees. A bachelor's degree,
or baccalaureate, requires at least four academic years (120 SCH or 180 QCH) in
FTE postsecondary study. At least 40 semester credit hours (60 QCH) shall be in
upper-division courses, and no more than two academic years of instruction (no
more than 50 percent of credit hours used for the degree) shall be from schools
that do not offer baccalaureate degrees.
(A)
General Education: The degree requires one academic year (at least 30 SCH or 45
QCH) of general education, which includes the one-year undergraduate English
composition requirement.
(B) Major
Field: The degree requires distinct specialization, i.e., a "major," which
entails approximately one academic year of work (30 SCH or 45 QCH) in the main
subject, with 20 SCH (30 QCH) in the upper division and 15 SCH (22 or 23 QCH)
of upper-division hours taught by the resident faculty. A dual major simply
doubles these numbers.
(C) An
interdisciplinary major is also permitted. It requires two academic years (60
SCH) in either three or four disciplines, with at least 15 hours in each
discipline and at least 9 upper-division hours in each. A school may offer a
major or an interdisciplinary option in any field in which it has more than one
fully qualified teacher if at least one teaches full time.
(D) Degrees. The following bachelor's degree
names, levels and types are available in Oregon:
(i) Bachelor of Arts. An arts degree, the
B.A. requires competency in a foreign language and one academic year in the
humanities, i.e., 30 SCH, of which 12 can be in foreign languages. The language
competency requirement is equivalent to the 12 hours, the second-year level,
and ESL students can satisfy it with 12 hours of English language and
literature. As general education outside the major, the B.A. requires 24 SCH in
the liberal arts and sciences, with at least 6 hours in each of the three
areas: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences.
(ii) Bachelor of Science. A science degree,
the B.S. requires one academic year in the social or natural sciences, i.e., 30
SCH, of which 12 can be in mathematics and state-approved computer courses. As
general education outside the major, the B.S. requires 24 SCH in the liberal
arts and sciences, with at least 6 hours in each of the three areas:
humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences.
(iii) Bachelor, Professional. As general
education outside the major, the professional bachelor's degree requires 24 SCH
hours in the liberal arts and sciences, with at least 6 hours in each of the
three liberal arts and sciences areas: humanities, social sciences, and natural
sciences.
(iv) Bachelor, Technical.
As general education outside the major, the technical bachelor's degree
requires 24 SCH in the liberal arts and sciences, or in non-vocational courses
closely related to them, with at least 3 semester hours in each of the three
areas: humanities, social studies, and natural sciences, and a total of at
least 9 in the two areas most unrelated to the major.
(d) Graduate Degrees. A graduate
curriculum shall reflect a concept of the graduate school as a group of
scholars, the faculty members of which have had extensive collegiate teaching
experience and are engaged in the advancement of knowledge. A graduate degree
must involve teaching by such qualified faculty and cannot be earned solely by
testing and/or portfolio review.
(A) A
master's degree shall require at least one full academic year in FTE
post-baccalaureate study, except that a first-professional master's degree may
be authorized for study beyond fulfillment of undergraduate requirements
approved by the Commission if the total period of study is at least five
academic years. The curriculum shall specialize in a single discipline or
single occupational or professional area and culminate in a demonstration of
mastery such as a research thesis, a work of art, or the solution of a
practical professional problem.
(B)
A doctor's degree shall require at least three academic years in specialized
post-baccalaureate FTE study, except that a first-professional doctor's degree
may be authorized for four academic years of study beyond fulfillment of
undergraduate requirements approved by the Commission. Study for a closely
related master's degree may be counted toward doctoral requirements. The
doctor's degree shall represent a student's ability to perform independently
basic or applied research at the level of the professional scholar or to
perform independently the work of a profession that involves the highest levels
of knowledge and expertise. Requirements for the degree shall include
demonstration of mastery of a significant body of knowledge through
comprehensive examination, unless a graduate must pass a similar examination in
order to be admitted to professional practice in Oregon. The curricular program
of a research degree shall be appropriately broad and shall manifest full
understanding of the level and range of doctoral scholarship, the function of a
dissertation and its defense, the nature of comprehensive examination, and the
distinction between matriculation and degree candidacy.
(7) Learning. The school shall
require each student to complete academic assignments and demonstrate learning
appropriate to the curriculum undertaken.
(a)
Teachers or evaluators shall inform students clearly using a syllabus or
similar instrument of what should be learned in each course and how it will be
measured.
(b)
(A) Expectations of student performance shall
be increased with each ascending step in degree level. Higher degrees must
represent an increase in the difficulty of work and expectations of students,
not simply an accumulation or increase in quantity of student work.
(B) Evidence of expectation (e.g., syllabi
and sample exams) and performance (e.g., student grades) shall be retained for
all academic courses for at least one year.
(c) The school shall require students to make
continuous progress toward a degree while they are enrolled and liable for
tuition and shall suspend or dismiss those who do not make such progress,
except that a period of probation with guidance may be instituted in order to
obviate separation of a student who can be expected to improve immediately.
Continuous progress for students receiving Title IV federal student aid shall
be defined according to federal Title IV standards. Students not receiving
Title IV federal student aid shall meet the school's own published standards
for satisfactory progress.
(d)
Grading and appeal procedures shall be fair and administered equitably, and
criteria of student progress shall be validated by research if not obviously
valid.
(8) Recruitment:
(a) The school is responsible for ensuring
that its recruitment agents are knowledgeable about the school's:
(A) History and accreditation;
(B) Programs of study;
(C) Admission and assessment
requirements;
(D) Ability to assist
in providing housing and/or job placement;
(E) Financial policies and procedures,
including the point at which students can expect to receive financial aid
disbursements;
(F) Refund
policy;
(G) Graduation requirements
and rates;
(H) Rules and
regulations; and
(I) Placement
rates if they are used in recruiting.
(b) The school is responsible for insuring
that its recruitment agents are providing accurate, realistic information about
the school, its policies and achievements, and its ability to assist
students.
(c) A prospective student
shall receive a complete description of the school and its policies, including
an estimate of annual or program costs, before being enrolled. This estimate is
not binding on the institution but must give prospective students a reasonable
idea of their financial commitment.
(d) Where a degree or certificate implies
preparation for a specific occupation, the school shall explain clearly the
true relationship between its curriculum and subsequent student qualification
for occupational practice, including employment rates in the field and
graduates' success rates in passing licensure examinations if applicable.
Employment rates in the field claimed by a particular program shall treat
graduates as employed in the field only if the position in which the graduate
is employed meets the following conditions.
(A) is at least half-time.
(B) is usually filled by a person with a
credential of the kind offered by the program or is one in which holders of
such a credential have a competitive advantage in the workplace because of
training of the kind provided by the program.
(C) employs the graduate within six months of
program completion in a position that is intended to be permanent, i.e. not for
a defined period of time. The school has the burden of showing that the
position is intended to be permanent.
(e) The school shall take precautions to
avoid unrealistic expectation of housing availability and cost when the school
does not provide housing and job placement, including part-time employment and
practica during the student's enrollment.
(f) A claim made to attract students shall be
documented by evidence available to any person on request. The school shall
make no attempt to attract anyone who does not appear likely to benefit from
enrollment, and no attempt to attract students on any basis other than
instruction and campus life appropriate to an educational
institution.
(g) Outside the
regular student financial aid process, there shall be no discounting of tuition
as an incentive to enroll.
(h) The
school shall not contract with a third-party entity, independent contractor or
corporation for the recruitment or enrollment of students where payment to the
third-party is based wholly or in part on a commission basis. Commission
includes monetary and nonmonetary compensation.
(9) Admission. The school shall offer
admission only on receipt of evidence that the applying student can reasonably
expect to complete a degree and/or to benefit from the education obtained.
(a) A student admitted to undergraduate
degree study for the first time shall have either a standard high school
diploma, a comparable credential issued outside the United States or a GED.
Home-schooled students without a standard diploma or GED may only be admitted
if they can demonstrate the ability to perform college-level academic work
through use of an ability-to-benefit test. Modified diplomas, extended diplomas
and other kinds of K-12 leaver certificates are not considered diplomas for
purposes of college admissions. Students holding such nonstandard certificates
can be admitted only through use of an ability-to-benefit test.
(b) A high school student enrolled in courses
for academic credit through a non-degree partnership program offered by an
authorized institution, who does not have a standard high school diploma, a
comparable credential issued outside the United States, or GED may enroll for
academic credit only if they can demonstrate the ability to perform college
level academic work. The Commission authorized institution must have current
National Alliance of Concurrent Enrollment Partnership (NACEP)
accreditation.
(c) A student
admitted to undergraduate degree study with undergraduate experience shall have
a record of successful performance therein or else a record of responsibility
and achievement following unsuccessful collegiate performance.
(d) A student admitted to graduate degree
study shall have a baccalaureate degree from a school that is accredited,
authorized to confer degrees in Oregon, or otherwise approved by the Commission
either individually or by category.
(e) A student admitted to first-professional
degree study shall have at least three academic years of accredited or
Commission-approved undergraduate credit, graded average or better, including
pre-professional courses specified by the school and approved by the
commission.
(10)
Guidance. The school shall help students to understand the curriculum and to
make the best use of it.
(a) There shall be a
program of general orientation for new students.
(b) Each student shall be assigned a
qualified academic advisor to assist individually in planning, course
selection, learning methods, and general adjustment.
(c) The school shall provide career guidance
to the extent that curriculum is related to a specific prospective occupation
or profession.
(11)
Student Affairs. Through both services and supervision the school shall
demonstrate commitment to the success of individual students and to maintenance
of an atmosphere conducive to learning.
(a)
Rules of student conduct shall be reasonable, sufficiently specific, fully
communicated, systematically and equitably enforced, and accompanied by policy
and practice of disciplinary due process, including notice and hearing and
related rights.
(b) Health,
counseling or psychological services provided to students must meet
requirements for professional practice in Oregon.
(c) Housing where provided or endorsed by the
school shall be conducive to study and adequately supervised.
(d) Financial aid services shall be provided
by qualified administrators.
(e)
Placement services where provided shall be described clearly to students, and
the school shall take precautions to avoid unrealistic expectation of
placement.
(f) Records documenting
relationships between the school and a student shall be open to that student,
who may request changes or enter dissenting comments, and the content of
records shall be objective and fair. Records that originate with a third-party
regarding a complaint against a student shall be open to the student so long as
all identifying information such as names and addresses shall be redacted prior
to producing the records to the student. The private notes of a counselor are
not to be considered educational records and shall not be transmitted as such,
either inside or outside the school. All medical records are confidential,
subject to state and federal laws and shall not be released without permission
of the patient.
(g) There shall be
available to undergraduate students and responsible for student affairs an
official who possesses knowledge, skill, and managerial experience particularly
appropriate to the function, unless the Commission waives this requirement. In
general, waivers are granted only for small startup schools in their first
approval cycle and for schools that mainly teach people who are of
nontraditional age (23 or older) or already in the workforce.
(h) Every school shall distribute a student
handbook or similar publication describing services and regulations, unless
such descriptions are complete in the school's main catalog.
(12) Information. The school shall
be scrupulously ethical in all communication with the public and with
prospective students. School publications, advertisements, and statements shall
be wholly accurate and in no way misleading. Reference to state approval shall
be limited to that described in OAR
583-030-0041. Reference to accreditation
shall be limited to that defined in OAR
583-030-0000.
(a) The school shall publish at least every
two years a catalog or general bulletin. The catalog shall contain a table of
contents and adequate information concerning period covered, school name and
address, telephone numbers, state approval, purpose, relationship to
occupational qualification, faculty and administrators (listing position or
teaching specialization together with all earned degrees and their sources,
omitting unearned degrees and not confusing professional licenses with
degrees), degree requirements and curricula, academic calendar, credit policy
in accordance with subsection (5) of this rule, transferability of credit to
other schools, admission requirements and procedures, academic advising and
career planning, academic policies and grading, rules of conduct and
disciplinary procedure, student services (e.g., counseling, health, placement,
housing, food, bookstore, activities, organizations), student records, library,
facilities, fees and refunds, estimated total expenses, financial aid and job
opportunities for current students. Electronic publication meets this standard
provided that the electronic catalog is provided to the Commission, is
available to students upon request, and is maintained securely with the school
as the official version in order to avoid confusion if electronic versions are
changed. Paper copies of the school catalog shall be maintained by the school
and made available to the Commission and students upon request.
(b) A school without regional accreditation
shall print in a separate section of its catalog titled "transfer of credit to
other schools" a statement warning students verbatim that "transfer of credit
is always at the discretion of the receiving school, generally depends on
comparability of curricula, and may depend on comparability of accreditation."
Other comments may follow concerning the school's documented experience in
credit transferability, but it must be clear that a student should make no
assumptions about credit transfer.
(c) A school authorized to offer instruction
or related services leading to one or more degrees under the standards in OAR
583-030-0035 shall provide students, prior to enrollment, a copy of a basic
program and school fact page for each program for which a certificate or degree
is offered. The fact page shall include information regarding:
(A) The total cost of the program;
(B) Programmatic and institutional
accrediting bodies;
(C) Transfer of
credit to other accredited institutions, listing of any transfer articulation
agreements with other institutions and in an attached document make available
to students the related transfer articulation pre-requisite
information;
(D) Program length,
and the average time students take to graduate by program, and at whole school
level;
(E) Graduation
rate;
(F) Median borrowing (federal
and private loans) amount, and median annual loan payments of
students;
(G) Loan default
rate;
(H) Job placement success
which is defined as a percent of students who are employed in the field of
study (by program);
(I) Median
starting salary for graduates;
(J)
Gainful employment results as outlined under U.S. Department of Education
accountability metrics; and
(i) The
Commission, at its discretion, may waive the requirement above for
non-career/non-vocational academic programs offered by regulated Oregon
non-profits.
(ii) A school
authorized to offer instruction shall submit to the Commission a copy of the
program fact page for each program on or before September 1 of each year
commencing 2016; however, for the school year 2015-2016 the fact page documents
shall be provided within 90 days of the date of the promulgation of the
rules.
(13) Credentials. The school shall provide
accurate and appropriate credit transcripts for students who enroll and
diplomas for students who graduate.
(a) The
school shall maintain for every past and present student, and shall issue at
the request of any student a current transcript of credits and degrees earned.
The transcript shall identify the school fully and explain the academic
calendar, length of term, credit structure, and grading system. It shall
identify the student and show all prior degrees earned, details of any credit
transferred or otherwise awarded at entry, and periods of enrollment. It shall
include for each period of enrollment every completed course or module with an
understandable title, number of credits earned, and grade received. The
transcript shall note with or without explanation if the student is not
immediately eligible to continue enrollment, e.g., for reasons of academic
probation or suspension.
(b) Upon
satisfaction of degree requirements, the school shall provide the graduating
student with a diploma in a form approved by the Commission, appropriately
documenting conferral of the degree.
(c) A school based in this state may not:
(A) Refuse to provide a transcript for a
current or former student because the student owes a debt to the
institution;
(B) Charge a higher
fee for obtaining a transcript to a current or former student because the
student owes a debt to the institution; or
(C) Use the issuance of a transcript as a
tool for debt collection.
(d) For the purposes of this rule, the
following definitions apply:
(A) "Debt" means
any money, obligation, claim or sum, due or owed, or alleged to be due or owed,
from a student that appears on the student's account at the post-secondary
institution of education. "Debt" does not mean the fee, if any, that is charged
to all students for the actual cost of providing a transcript.
(B) "Transcript" means the statement of a
student's academic record, including an official transcript, a certified
statement of a student's academic record or an uncertified statement of a
student's academic record, that is provided by a post-secondary institution of
education.
(14) Records. The school shall keep accurate
and secure records affecting students. There shall be at all times complete
duplicate transcript information kept in a location away from the original
transcripts, such that duplicates and originals are not exposed to risk of
simultaneous damage. In addition to transcripts, which may never be destroyed,
the school shall maintain detailed records documenting the significant parts of
its formal relationship with each student including: financial transactions and
accounts, admission qualifications, validation of advanced standing, instructor
course records as posted to transcripts, and status changes due to
unsatisfactory performance or conduct. Such supporting records shall be kept in
a secure location for a period of at least three years after a student has
discontinued enrollment. Instructor course records other than those posted to
transcripts shall be kept for at least one year.
(15) Library. The school shall provide or
arrange for its faculty and students direct or electronic access to verbal and
sensory materials sufficient in all subjects of the curriculum to support
instruction and to stimulate research or independent study.
(a) The school may arrange for comprehensive
privileges from libraries of other organizations, provided it can prove
convenient access and extensive use, but the school shall retain full
responsibility for adequacy of resources available to students.
(b) Library services shall be under the
direction of a person educated professionally in library and information
studies, except that the Commission may waive this requirement where the range
of academic fields represented is narrow.
(c) Library resources shall be current, well
distributed among fields in which the institution offers instruction,
cataloged, logically organized, and readily located.
(d) The school should conform to the
following guidelines for library services unless it can justify a deviation on
the basis of unusual educational requirements.
(A) With the exception of those in
specialized associate's degree programs, students should receive direct,
contracted or electronic access to a minimal basic collection equivalent to
that held by accredited schools offering similar programs. The applicant school
must demonstrate this capability.by submitting to the Commission copies of
contractual arrangements with resource providers and related resource
references that will be available to students.
(B) Staff should include a professional
librarian for each 1,000 students, with clerical support adequate to relieve
librarians of all non-professional duties.
(C) Students should have full access to all
resources for at least 40 hours per week, and all services should be available
for 20 hours per week. The facility, whether provided by the college directly
or by contract, should seat no less than 10 percent of the students enrolled
unless the program is primarily intended to train practitioners in technical or
fine arts fields, in which case a lower percentage may be requested. If the
school meets the library standard largely by electronic means, electronic
services must be available to a comparable portion of the student body for a
comparable period.
(16) Facilities. The school shall have
buildings and equipment sufficient for the achievement of all educational
objectives.
(a) Buildings in general,
including student or faculty housing units, shall be uncrowded, safe, clean,
well furnished, and in good repair; and they shall be well lighted, heated,
ventilated, and protected from noise. School grounds, where provided, shall be
appropriately used and adequately maintained.
(b) Instructional facilities shall be
adequate and conducive to learning. There shall be no less than 15 square feet
per student station in classrooms, with at least one station for every two FTE
students enrolled. Total classroom and study area, including library space for
reading, shall be no less than 10 square feet per FTE student.
(c) Laboratory space and instructional
equipment shall be inventoried, its use explained on the resulting report, and
its adequacy defended on criteria obtained from experts and documented by the
school. A laboratory ordinarily shall have no less than 30 square feet per
student station.
(d) Clinical
facilities and other public service areas shall be appropriate for instruction
of students as well as for service to patients or clients.
(e) Faculty offices shall be sufficient to
prevent crowding and to allow private conversations with students.
(17) Finance. The school shall
have financial resources sufficient to ensure successful continuing operation
and to guarantee full refund of any unearned tuition. There shall be competent
financial planning using complete and accurate records. The school shall
demonstrate satisfaction of this standard upon application, and thereafter
annually, by submitting independently audited financial statements with opinion
by a certified public accountant.
(a)
Financial reports shall be prepared in a format acceptable to the Commission,
clearly delineating assets and liabilities and informatively classifying
revenues by source and expenditures by function. In some cases, the Commission
at its discretion may accept an audited balance sheet with opinion, together
with annual operating statements that have been reviewed by the auditor. A
school that is a subsidiary shall submit financial statements of the parent
corporation on request. The Commission's Executive Director may require a
special investigative audit and report.
(b) Current assets shall be entirely tangible
and such that the school is not dependent for solvency on substantial increases
in receivables collection rate, gifts, tuition rates, or enrollment.
Prospective tuition for which a student is not legally liable is not an asset
and shall not be shown as a receivable or other balance sheet asset. Tuition
collected but still subject to refund shall be shown as a "prepaid" or
"unearned" tuition liability.
(c) A
school unable to demonstrate financial strength may be required at the
discretion of the Commission's Executive Director to increase the amount of its
surety bond or letter of credit in an amount equal to the largest amount of
prepaid tuition held at any time. The bond or letter of credit would be subject
to claims for tuition refund only.
(d) The school shall carry casualty and
general liability insurance sufficient to guarantee continuity in case of
accident or negligence, and it shall provide or else require by policy
professional liability insurance for all of its officers and
employees.
(18) Fees and
Refunds. The school shall maintain fee and refund policies that are fair,
uniformly administered, and clearly explained in the school catalog as well as
in any contract made with students. A student shall not be enrolled without
having received the explanatory material. The school shall not change its
tuition or fees more than once during a calendar year.
(a) Tuition shall be charged by the credit
hour or by fixed rate for instruction during an academic semester, quarter, or
shorter term. No student is obligated for tuition charged for a term that had
not commenced when the student withdrew or a term that was truncated by
cessation of school services. The student may make a claim on a surety bond or
letter of credit under OAR
583-030-0051 and OAR
583-030-0052.
(b) Except as noted below in this section,
fees not included in tuition shall not exceed five percent of full-time tuition
for any term in which separate fees are charged. One-time application or
admission fees may exceed 5 percent of first-term tuition but shall not exceed
$200. Lab or equipment fees related to the actual necessary operational costs
of specific courses may exceed 5 percent of tuition provided that the fees are
made known to students prior to enrollment in the course. Nominal fees for late
payments, course withdrawals and the like are acceptable.
(c) After classes begin for a term, a student
who withdraws from a course is eligible for a partial refund through the middle
week of the term. Refunds shall be based on unused instructional time and shall
be prorated on a weekly basis for schools using a semester, quarter, or
nontraditional calendar. Refund rates shall not be differentiated on the
criteria of a student's source of income or loan repayment obligations except
as otherwise required by law without specific Commission approval.
(d) Any fees for credit transferred, for
credit attempted or earned by examination or portfolio must be based on the
actual cost of service to administer such credits. This is ordinarily less than
the cost of regular instruction. The mere award of credit does not justify a
fee.
(e) Academic policies shall
not artificially prolong the enrollment of a failing student with the effect of
increasing financial obligation.
(f) Separation from the school for reason of
discipline or other administrative action shall not cause forfeiture of
ordinary refund amounts.
(19) Evaluation. The school shall, in order
to improve programs, evaluate its own educational effectiveness continually in
relation to purpose and planning, including in all aspects the opinions of
students. There shall be evaluation of present curriculum and instruction, of
attrition and reasons for student withdrawal, and of performance by students
after their graduation. In addition to the comments of graduates, employer
opinions and licensing examination records should be used in the
post-graduation study.
(20) Fair
Practice. Notwithstanding the absence of a specific standard or prohibition in
this rule, no school authorized to offer degrees or seeking to qualify for such
authorization shall engage in any practice that is fraudulent, dishonest,
unethical, unsafe, exploitive, irresponsible, deceptive, or inequitable and
thus harmful or unfair to persons with whom it deals.