American College Dublin

American College Dublin
Motto Ad astra per angusta
Type Private(Non-Profit)
Established 1993
President Dr Donald E. Ross
Dean Dr Rory McEntegart
Address Merrion Square, Dublin., Dublin, Ireland
53°20′28″N 6°15′02″W / 53.341057°N 6.250480°W / 53.341057; -6.250480Coordinates: 53°20′28″N 6°15′02″W / 53.341057°N 6.250480°W / 53.341057; -6.250480
Nickname American College
Affiliations HETAC, MSCHE
Website http://www.iamu.edu
Facing Merrion Square

American College, Dublin, a constituent college of Irish American University, is a private not-for-profit liberal arts institution, accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education (MSCHE). Established in 1993 in Dublin Ireland, the institution is located in the center of Dublin on Merrion Square in a number of Georgian era houses, one of which is the childhood home of Oscar Wilde. In addition to its American accreditation with MSCHE, American College Dublin offers programs placed at level-eight and level-nine on the Irish National Framework of Qualifications which are accredited by the Irish body Quality and Qualifications Ireland (QQI) and for which graduating students receive QQI awards.

American College Dublin was founded as an independent educational trust in May 1993 by Lynn University, a liberal arts institution located in Boca Raton, Florida. The college admitted its first liberal arts and business degree students in September 1993 and graduated its first class in 1996. The development of the College’s Dublin campus continued through the 1990s; in 2002 the institution expanded its operations with the establishment of a sister campus in Delaware, which became known as American College Delaware.

Degrees and courses

The college offers a number of undergraduate and graduate courses validated by QQI.[1]

There are also a number of courses validated through the Middle States Commission on Higher Education.[2]

The college also offers a Study Abroad program to students from the United States. Students can study at ACD during the fall and spring semesters (15 weeks) as well as in an eight-week summer semester. American College Dublin has two undergraduate programs for which graduating students receive QQI awards:

American College Dublin has one graduate program for which graduating students receive a QQI award:

Controversy

In 2010, the Psychological Society of Ireland (PSI) withdrew accreditation from the college's psychology course because of concerns about quality. Sixty-two students who had paid fees to the college found themselves unable to finish their degree there, and 50 of them finished their course at the nearby Dublin Business School. Students at the college, speaking to The Irish Times newspaper, said at the time that the college was poorly resourced. [3]

Accreditation

American College Dublin has been an accredited institution of the Irish state accreditation agencies since 1996 (NCEA from 1996 to 1999, HETAC from 1999 to 2014, QQI from 2014 to the present)

The college was the subject of a critical report by the Higher Education and Training Awards Council (HETAC, now absorbed into QQI), which highlighted a series of institutional failures at the American College and made no less than 37 recommendations for change. The college was reprimanded for calling itself the “Irish American University” when it had no status as a university. However, the college did submit an institutional review to HETAC in June 2011, in which they outlined a number of steps they had taken to improve quality. [4]

The College underwent in 2010 an institutional review as part of the cyclical accreditation process of the Higher Education and Training Awards Council (HETAC, now absorbed into QQI). Several recommendations were made; these were addressed and accepted fully by HETAC in follow-up reports in the course of 2011 and the College's institutional recognition by the body remains in place. All of the College's HETAC programs were reaccredited under programmatic review in 2011 and, by QQI, in the following quinquennial review cycle in 2016. The College received full accreditation from the Middle States Commission on Higher Education in 2013. [5]

Psychology program

In 2010, the Psychological Society of Ireland (PSI) limited the term of its validation of the College's psychology program to one year, in the course of which it required new validation criteria to be met. Given the uncertainty about the future of the program's PSI validation, the College arranged for students who wished to complete the degree under PSI validation to transfer to a similar program at Dublin Business School. In the event, all of the affected students elected to transfer out of the program. A critical article, contested by the College, was subsequently published by The Irish Times newspaper. [6]

References

  1. Business
  2. Middle States Commission for Higher Education.
  3. "", Damaged by a psychological blow, Peter McGuire, The Irish Times, September 21, 2010
  4. "", American College Dublin, Institutional Review, Progress report submitted in accordance with the accreditation requirements of the Higher Education and Training Award Council, June 2011
  5. "", American College Dublin, Institutional Review, Progress report submitted in accordance with the accreditation requirements of the Higher Education and Training Award Council, June 2011
  6. "", Damaged by a psychological blow, Peter McGuire, The Irish Times, September 21, 2010

External links

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