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  News Archives - Organizational News

INCOSE Becomes Newest ABET Member Society

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 15, 2008

Baltimore, MD – ABET, Inc., announces that the admission of the International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE) has been ratified by the ABET societies.  INCOSE joins ABET as a Member Society, effective immediately. ABET Member Societies have responsibilities in accreditation of degree programs, participate in the ABET accreditation commissions, and have at least one voting member on the ABET Board of Directors. INCOSE will have responsibility as one of the Lead Societies for systems engineering programs, specifically those programs whose titles do not reference other program criteria. 

The ABET Board of Directors approved the admission of INCOSE as a Member Society in November 2007, subject to ratification by two-thirds of ABET’s Member Societies. ABET is one of the largest federations of professional and technical societies in the United States. With the addition of INCOSE, those societies now total 29.

“ABET is extremely pleased with the ratification of INCOSE,” says ABET President Skip Fletcher. “It is important that ABET continues to involve the relevant professions in the accreditation process. It is our ability to do so that makes ABET a leader in the world’s educational community.”

The International Council on Systems Engineering was founded in 1990 to develop and disseminate the interdisciplinary principles and practices that enable the realization of successful systems. There are more than 6,000 members of INCOSE.  More information about INCOSE and systems engineering is available at the organization’s website: www.incose.org.

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Comptroller Joins ABET Staff

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 27, 2008

Baltimore, MD – Lance K. Hoboy, CAE, was recently added to the ABET staff as Comptroller. Hoboy comes to ABET with more than 30 years of experience in business development, finance, and strategic planning. Most recently, he served as Chief Financial Officer at wireless communications provider Worldcell, Inc. Prior to that, he was Vice President of Finance and Strategic Planning for the Parenteral Drug Association. Hoboy has a BS in mechanical engineering from Stanford University and an MBA from Cornell University.

“Lance Hoboy is a great addition to our headquarters leadership team,” said ABET Executive Director George D. Peterson, Ph.D., PE. “He has a unique combination of training as an engineer and experience leading the finance and operations units of a variety successful for- and not-for-profit organizations. I am confident that he will help us improve our efficiency in many areas, from financial management to customer service and beyond.”

As Comptroller, Hoboy is responsible for the management and administration of ABET’s financial accounting, treasury, and budgeting activities. He will work closely with the ABET Treasurer and the Board Finance Committee in these areas. In addition, Hoboy oversees the Information Technology Department, as well as general office operations.

“I am thrilled,” said Hoboy, “to have the opportunity to serve a prestigious organization such as ABET, with its tradition of more than 75 years of dedication to the advancement of education in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology.”

A complete listing of ABET headquarters staff can be found at www.abet.org/staff.shtml.

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ABET Admitted as Provisional Member of International Technology Accords

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 22, 2007

Washington, D.C. – At their biennial meetings this week in Washington, D.C., signatories of the Sydney and Dublin Accords granted ABET, Inc., with provisional signatory status in both agreements. ABET applied for membership to the accords at the recommendation of its Technology Accreditation Commission earlier this year.

The Sydney and Dublin Accords, modeled on the Washington Accord for engineering, are mutual recognition agreements among accreditors of engineering technology programs. The agreements recognize the substantial equivalency of programs accredited by member signatories and recommends that the graduates of those accredited programs in any of the signatory jurisdictions be recognized by the other jurisdictions as having met the academic requirements for entry into the practice of engineering technology at either the technologist (Sydney Accord) or technician (Dublin Accord) level. The Sydney Accord was signed in 2001; the Dublin Accord in 2002.

ABET is a founding member of the Washington Accord, which was established in 1989 and now has 12 full and four provisional signatories. Members of the Washington Accord also met this week in Washington, D.C., as part of the 2007 International Engineering Meetings. ABET was the host of these meetings.

“ABET’s new status as a member of the Sydney and Dublin Accords is not only a significant achievement for the organization but an important advantage for the technologists and technicians graduating from ABET-accredited programs,” said Dr. David E. Hornbeck, ABET’s Adjunct Accreditation Director for Technology and Professor Emeritus of Civil Engineering Technology at Southern Polytechnic State University. “These agreements should allow ABET graduates to participate more easily in the global economy, which is becoming increasingly necessary in our professions.”

The current members of the Sydney Accord are as follows:

  • Canadian Council of Technicians and Technologists (CCTT)

  • Engineering Council of South Africa (ECSA)

  • Hong Kong Institution of Engineers (HKIE)

  • Institution of Engineers, Australia (IEAust)

  • Institution of Engineers of Ireland (IEI)

  • Institution of Professional Engineers, New Zealand (IPENZ)

  • Engineering Council UK (ECUK)

The current members of the Dublin Accord are as follows:

  • Canadian Council of Technicians and Technologists (CCTT)

  • Engineering Council of South Africa (ECSA)

  • Institution of Engineers of Ireland (IEI)

  • Engineering Council UK

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ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 28 professional and technical societies representing these fields. Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for 75 years. ABET currently accredits some 2,700 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide. Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities. ABET also provides leadership internationally through workshops, consultancies, memoranda of understanding, and mutual recognition agreements, such as the Washington Accord. ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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George Peterson to Participate in Spellings Summit

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 20, 2007

ABET Executive Director George D. Peterson, Ph.D., P.E., will participate in U.S. Department of Education Secretary Margaret Spellings' summit in Washington, D.C., this week. The much anticipated summit, titled "A Test of Leadership: Committing to Advance Post-Secondary Education for all Americans," is billed by the Department of Education as a "key component" of Spellings' plan for revamping the U.S. higher education system.

Peterson is among 300 attendees said to be "key players" in the higher education community. The complete attendee list, as well as more information on the agenda and goals of the summit, was reported today by Inside Higher Ed: http://insidehighered.com/news/2007/03/20/summit.  

ABET withdrew its recognition from the U.S. Department of Education in 2001. The organization, however, continues to be engaged by the Department because of its distinguished leadership in technical education and outcomes-based accreditation.  

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Call for Comments on Dual-Level Engineering Accreditation

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 1, 2006

ABET is watching and listening closely to the discussions following the release of the National Academy of Engineering Engineer of 2020 reports, particularly those regarding accreditation at both the bachelor’s and master’s levels. This practice is currently prohibited by the Engineering Accreditation Commission (EAC) of ABET.

Specifically, the reports recommend that the bachelor’s degree “be considered as a pre-engineering or ‘engineer in training’ degree,” rather than the first professional degree, as the bachelor’s is widely considered now.

Many in the engineering community favor the master’s degree as the first professional degree, citing the need to both enhance the status of the engineering profession and to enable new engineers to enter the profession with the breadth and depth of knowledge many feel is required in today’s increasingly global economy.

Others argue for the bachelor’s to remain as the first professional degree out of concern for creating yet another roadblock in the U.S. engineering pipeline.

Ultimately, ABET must respond to its core constituencies — the 28 professional societies that comprise it and the academic institutions that invite it to assess their programs. ABET will not be a “driver” in this regard, but it must be responsive to the needs of its constituents. That may mean being a facilitator for those programs who seek to change and for the profession as a whole, should it decide to move in the direction of the 2020 recommendations.

ABET needs to hear from you on this issue. Should the EAC prohibition on dual-level accreditation be removed? Please send your comments to ABET President Richard Seagrave, Ph.D., via the Contact Us feature of this website. Comments would be appreciated in time for the EAC’s Executive Committee meeting in January 2007.

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Program Evaluator Training Beta Held

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 28, 2006

Baltimore, MD – On June 17 and 18, program evaluator candidates from ASCE, ASEE, ASME, and IEEE participated in a training beta test. The beta was designed as a “dress rehearsal” for ABET's new program evaluator training process, which will be piloted in July. Prototype Training Team members Daina Breidis, AICHE; Jim O’Brien, ASCE; John Orr, IEEE; Mike Robinson, ANS; Susan Schall, IIE; and Joe Turner, CSAB; have been working with ABET to develop the training since mid-January. 

Improving program evaluator training is part of the process improvements generated by the Participation Project (along with recommendations for recruitment, selection, and evaluation of program evaluators). 

One participant commented that the beta training was “excellent participation and covered a lot of ground.” Another participant said the training was “very well done, one of the best trainings I have attended.”  Overall, the six participants gave the training high marks. 

“While we are making some changes based on the feedback from the participants, we are encouraged by how well it went,” said Susan Schall, who served as the beta's Core Facilitator. “The training is definitely new and improved,“ she added
.

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PE: The Magazine for Professional Engineers Reports on ABET Plans for International Accreditation

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 11, 2006

Baltimore, MD – In its May issue, PE: The Magazine for Professional Engineers, a publication of the National Society of Professional Engineers (NSPE), reports on ABET's plans for international accreditation. "ABET Accreditation Plans Go Global," which appears in the magazine's "Communities" section, features a brief look at the catalysts for this initiative and notes some of the principles the organization will be adhering to as it moves forward. Visit www.nspe.org for PE subscription information.

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Graduates of ABET-Accredited Safety Programs Exempted From First Step to Professional Certification

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 24, 2006

Baltimore, MD – The Board of Certified Safety Professionals (BCSP), a peer review board that certifies practitioners in the safety profession, approved a measure that grants the designation of Graduate Safety Practitioner (GSP) to all students who complete bachelor’s and master’s degree programs holding accreditation from the Applied Science Accreditation Commission (ASAC) of ABET. Achieving the GSP designation is considered the first step towards Certified Safety Professional (CSP) certification, the equivalent of licensure for safety professionals.

BCSP grants students qualifying for the GSP designation a waiver from the Safety Fundamentals examination, one of the qualifications to receive CSP certification. This status will not exempt safety graduates from the academic and experience requirements or from the Comprehensive Practice examination necessary to achieve certification, but the GSP designation recognizes that these students have met the highest level of academic preparation for the safety profession through coursework, capstone projects, and the practical experience that internships grant during their studies. According to the December 2005 BCSP Newsletter, most of the Board’s directors felt that students who have completed the rigorousness of ABET-accredited safety programs, which are evaluated by volunteers from the American Society of Safety Engineers (ASSE), consequentially will have the foundation knowledge required for entry into and success within the profession that the Safety Fundamentals examination aims to assess.

Traditionally, students from ABET-accredited safety programs have been allowed to sit for the Safety Fundamentals examination prior to their graduations, and the BCSP’s current policy that waives the application fees of those who take the exam will remain in effect. However, the designation of these students as Graduate Safety Practitioners will encourage recent graduates to achieve the CSP early in their careers and will afford them with the advantages that CSP certification grants sooner than the average safety professional would receive them. Designation of graduates from ABET-accredited programs as Graduate Safety Practitioners may also encourage non-accredited safety degree programs to pursue ABET accreditation and achieve the prestige and quality assurance benefits that this recognition provides.

The BCSP hopes to launch the Graduate Safety Practitioner program in time for May 2006 graduations. More information about the GSP program is available on the BCSP website at www.bcsp.org/gsp.

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ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 28 professional and technical societies representing these fields. Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for over 70 years. ABET currently accredits some 2,700 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide. Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities. ABET also provides leadership internationally through agreements such as the Washington Accord, and offers educational credentials evaluation services through ECEI to those educated abroad. ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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"Competency Model" for Program Evaluators Approved by ABET Board of Directors

Click here to download the model. (pdf)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 29, 2005

Baltimore, MD – At its October 29 meeting, the Board of Directors of ABET, Inc., the recognized accrediting body for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, unanimously approved a “competency model” that embodies the knowledge, skills, and attitudes exhibited by an effective program evaluator.  The competency model will serve as the minimum criteria in recruiting and selecting potential program evaluators and as a tool against which each program evaluator’s performance will be assessed following the campus evaluation visit.  With the Board’s approval, the competency model will now become part of ABET’s Rules of Procedure.

 The competency model is one of the results of ABET’s Participation Project, a human resource initiative that aims to optimize the expertise and experience of the volunteers who participate in ABET’s outcomes-based accreditation process.  Consultants from Cardea Communications (www.cardeacom.net), who are assisting ABET with this endeavor, conducted a survey to ascertain which traits ABET team chairs feel are necessary to assume effectively the role of program evaluator.  Between 96 and 98 percent of the respondents gave an “important” or “very important” rating to each of the following characteristics:  technically current, effective at communicating, interpersonally skilled, team-oriented, professional, and organized.  These qualities became the basis for the competency model.  Further, the model specifies the desired proficiency for each quality and explains how those proficiencies would be demonstrated on an actual campus visit.  The complete model can be found on the next page.

The approval of this competency model is only the first of many improvements ABET hopes will result from the Participation Project.  Processes used to recruit, select, train, and evaluate ABET volunteers have been examined in depth, and recommendations for their improvement will be piloted throughout 2006.  These changes are expected to enhance the quality and consistency of the ABET accreditation process to the benefit of both accredited programs and all of the many volunteers and society staff members who carry out this process.  The Participation Project focuses on the value-added for all involved.

ABET Executive Director George D. Peterson, Ph.D., P.E., said, “The results of this project could very well be the most significant contributions to the accreditation process since the adoption of outcomes-based criteria.” 

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ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 28 professional and technical societies representing these fields. Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for over 70 years. ABET currently accredits some 2,700 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide. Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities. ABET also provides leadership internationally through agreements such as the Washington Accord, and offers educational credentials evaluation services through ECEI to those educated abroad. ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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ABET Executive Director Recognized Among Technology's Most Important Blacks for Second Straight Year

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 17, 2005

Baltimore, MD For the second year in a row, George D. Peterson, Ph.D., P.E., Executive Director of ABET, Inc., has been named one of the year’s “Most Important Blacks in Technology” by the editors of US Black Engineer & Information Technology magazine. 

 US Black Engineer & Information Technology chose Peterson as one of the distinguished professionals who comprises its prestigious “100 Most Important Blacks in Technology” list for 2006.  This year’s list will be published in the November/December 2005 issue of the magazine, which is distributed nationwide to engineering colleges, engineering and information technology professionals, and top corporate and government decision-makers.  As a recipient of this honor, Peterson will be presented to the nation’s young people as a role model, his accomplishments highlighted as examples of the contributions that the millions of Black men and women working in the technology and business world make daily.  Previously, Peterson was selected as one of the magazine’s “50 Most Important Blacks in Technology” for 2005.

Peterson and this year’s other honorees will be recognized during a black-tie awards ceremony at the Murphy Fine Arts Center at Morgan State University in Baltimore on Friday, February 17, 2006.  This event will serve as the high point of the three-day 20th Annual Black Engineer of the Year Awards Conference, a premiere career development and employee recognition event for African Americans in engineering, science, and technology.

A former electrical engineering program evaluator and Engineering Accreditation Commission (EAC) Chair, Peterson has served as ABET’s Executive Director for more than a decade.  His previous positions include Chair of the Department of Electrical Engineering at the U.S. Naval Academy and Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs and Professor of Electrical Engineering at Morgan State University.  In addition to leading ABET, Peterson is currently Chair of the Specialized and Professional Advisory Panel and member of the Committee on Recognition of the Council for Higher Education Accreditation; Vice-Chair of the Engineering Workforce Commission of the American Association of Engineering Societies; and a former member of the Executive Council of Tau Beta Pi, the engineering honor society.  Peterson also serves on the Board of Trustees of the Maryland Institute College of Art.

In 1972, while serving with the U.S. Air Force in Southeast Asia, Peterson was decorated with the Bronze Star.  His other awards include the Black Engineer of the Year Award for the Promotion of Higher Education, the IEEE Meritorious Achievement Award in accreditation activities, the University of Illinois Electrical and Computer Engineering Alumni Association Distinguished Alumnus Award, and an honorary Doctor of Humanities degree from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University.  Peterson is a Fellow of IEEE, a Fellow of ABET, and a Fellow of the Institution of Engineers of Ireland, and he was recently selected as a Fellow of the Institution of Electrical Engineers of Great Britain. Peterson earned his BS degree in electrical engineering from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, his MS in electrical engineering from the Air Force Institute of Technology, and his Ph.D. in electrical engineering from the University of Illinois.  In 1988, he retired a Lieutenant Colonel following more than 20 years of armed service in the U.S. Air Force.

Click here for the "100 Most Important Blacks in Technology List" for 2006.

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ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 28 professional and technical societies representing these fields. Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for over 70 years. ABET currently accredits some 2,700 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide. Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities. ABET also provides leadership internationally through agreements such as the Washington Accord, and offers educational credentials evaluation services through ECEI to those educated abroad. ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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2005-2006 ABET Officers Installed

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 29, 2005

Baltimore, MD – ABET, Inc., the recognized accrediting body for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, installed its new slate of officers on October 29, 2005, at the biannual meeting of its Board of Directors, held in San Diego, California. The following individuals will serve as the officers of the ABET Board of Directors for the 2005-2006 term:

Richard C. Seagrave, Ph.D. is the 2005-2006 ABET President. Previously, Seagrave served two terms as ABET Secretary, dually representing ABET and the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE). During his five years on the ABET Board of Directors, he served on the International Activities Committee of ABET and as Board Liaison to the Engineering Accreditation Commission (EAC). Seagrave was a member of the EAC from 1992 to 1999 and served as its Chair in 1996-97. In 1999, he was named an ABET Fellow. Seagrave is Distinguished Professor Emeritus in the Department of Chemical Engineering at Iowa State University. He earned his Ph.D. from Iowa State University.

 William S. Clark, P.E., is the 2005-2006 President-Elect. On October 29, he concluded a two-year term as Board Representative to ABET’s Executive Committee. Clark joined the Technology Accreditation Commission (TAC) as an Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers representative in 1987 and was TAC’s Chair in 1994-95. He subsequently led the criteria committee that wrote the initial version of the outcomes-based evaluation criteria, now referred to as TC2K. A Fellow of ABET, Clark was selected as one of IEEE’s three Representative Directors to the ABET Board of Directors in 2001. Clark is currently a Director of Finance at BellSouth Corporation in Atlanta, Georgia.

James H. Dooley, Ph.D., P.E., begins the second year of a two-year term as ABET Secretary for 2005-2006. Dooley holds engineering degrees from Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo; University of California at Davis; and the University of Washington. He is a licensed professional engineer in two states and holds six U.S. patents. Dooley is currently the President and CEO of Silverbrook Limited and is Executive Manager of Forest Concepts in Federal Way, Washington.

Allen I. Ormsbee, Ph.D., begins the second year of his third two-year term as ABET Treasurer in 2005-2006. Formerly Chair of the ABET Finance Committee, Ormsbee is Professor Emeritus of Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. In 1999, he retired as Professor and Chair of the Aerospace Engineering Department at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, Florida.

Roger M. Zimmerman, Ph.D., P.E., will serve the second year of a two-year term as Board Representative to ABET’s Executive Committee in 2005-2006. Zimmerman has represented the National Society of Professional Engineers on the ABET Board of Directors since 2001 and on the EAC from 1996-2001.  His professional career spans several positions at New Mexico State University, including Associate Dean of Engineering, and Sandia National Laboratories, including as a Distinguished Member of the Technical Staff and Project Manager. Currently, Zimmerman is the owner of Engineering Analyses, LLC, of Albuquerque, New Mexico. He earned his Ph.D. in structural mechanics from the University of Colorado.

James R. Plasker, P.E., will serve the first year of a two-year term as Board Representative to ABET’s Executive Committee, beginning in 2005-2006.  Plasker represents the American Congress on Surveying and Mapping (ACSM) on the ABET Board of Directors.  He has served as an ABET program evaluator for ACSM since 1990 and as the Chair of the Applied Science Accreditation Commission (ASAC) for 2002-2003. Plasker is the Executive Director of ASPRS: The Imaging and Geospatial Information Society, headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland. He holds a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering and a master’s degree in engineering surveys from Oregon State University.

Richard O. Anderson, P.E., will be Past President in 2005-2006. Anderson is a Principal Engineer with Somat Engineering, Inc., Detroit, Michigan, and a licensed professional engineer in eight states.

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ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 30 professional and technical societies representing these fields. Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for over 70 years. ABET currently accredits some 2,700 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide. Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities. ABET also provides leadership internationally through agreements such as the Washington Accord, and offers educational credentials evaluation services through ECEI to those educated abroad. ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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ABET Societies Join Forces to Strengthen Outcomes-Based Accreditation Process

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 9, 2005

Baltimore, MD – In an unprecedented collaborative effort, ABET’s member societies are joining forces to strengthen the outcomes-based accreditation process by creating a dynamic system of volunteer recruitment, selection, training, and evaluation. Dozens of societies are now directly involved in the Participation Project, which just launched Phase II of its five-phased plan. The Participation Project, begun in 2004, is aimed at optimizing the experience and expertise of the many hundreds of volunteers who carry out the accreditation process.

During Phase II, three teams of representatives from the ABET societies, including both staff and volunteers, are working to develop systematic processes for volunteer recruitment, selection, training, evaluation, and continuous improvement. The teams are collecting input from the societies on best practices, suggesting new strategies and processes, and identifying opportunities to enhance the methods currently used in recruitment, selection, training, and evaluation. By the end of Phase II, each of the three teams will have developed new methods and made recommendations for improvement to existing processes. During Phase III of the project, these methods and recommendations will be pilot-tested by societies that volunteer to participate in the pilot phase.

“Society engagement in this project is critical to its success,” says ABET’s Executive Director, George D. Peterson, Ph.D., P.E. “The great potential for outcomes-based accreditation can only be realized if all of ABET’s stakeholders work together. It’s exciting to see how much we’re learning from one another and how much this collaboration will benefit us all in the near future.”

Jim O'Brien, Director of Educational Activities at the American Society of Civil Engineers and a member of the training-focused design team, remarks, “I'm excited about my involvement with other society members on the Training Team, because we are working together to design a training model that will result in fair and consistent program evaluations.”

“Program evaluators and visit team chairs are the public face of ABET,” explains Patricia Daniels, Ph.D., Past Chair of the Engineering Accreditation Commission, Associate Dean of the College of Science and Engineering at Seattle University, and member of one of the Phase II design teams. “We need to make sure they have all the resources they need to do the best job they can do. And because evaluators and team chairs come from the various ABET societies, societies care about this too.”

According to Neal Coulter, Ph.D., Dean of the College of Computing, Engineering, and Construction at the University of North Florida, "The heart of ABET is its volunteers.” An ABET society liaison for CSAB, Inc.,
and a member of the Phase II design team focused on recruiting and selecting evaluators, Coulter continues, “The Participation Project gives ABET a chance to identify the best possible volunteers and to ensure they are prepared to serve the science, engineering, and technology professions. As a long-time volunteer myself, I hope my experiences and perspectives help to improve procedures.” Coulter says he is “especially concerned with identifying a diverse group of program evaluators for accreditation visits, so ABET serves it many constituents.”

“I am pleased to be working on this project to help ensure consistency in recruitment, selection, training, and evaluation of program evaluators across the disciplines to help accreditation, and thus engineering licensure, adapt and grow with the engineering profession,” says consulting engineer Jill Tietjen, P.E., also a member of the Recruitment and Selection Team, and a member of the Engineering Accreditation Commission. Tietjen explains, “Accreditation of engineering programs assures the integrity of the engineering education that students receive. Engineering education is one of the three components of the engineering licensure process. Thus, accreditation is critical in ensuring the protection of the health, safety, and welfare of the public through engineering licensure.”

Phase II of the Participation Project is set for completion at the end of August. Subsequent phases will include testing, revising, and implementing the solutions developed by the design teams and formalizing a continuous improvement plan. The entire project is expected to be complete by early 2007.

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ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 30 professional and technical societies representing these fields. Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for over 70 years. ABET currently accredits some 2,700 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide. Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities. ABET also provides leadership internationally through agreements such as the Washington Accord, and offers educational credentials evaluation services through ECEI to those educated abroad. ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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ABET Launches Redesigned Website

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 23, 2005

Baltimore, MD – ABET is pleased to announce the launch of our redesigned public website. Thanks to ABET's Communications Plan, activated by the Board of Directors in 2004, we were able to completely revamp our site with customer service in mind.

We hope you find the new site easier to navigate, more intuitive to use, and more interesting to surf.

So, take some time to browse around, don't forget to change your book marks, and please do let us know if you have any trouble at all with the new site. Comments and suggestions are welcome too.

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ABET Societies Gather to Help Kick Off Participation Project

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 11, 2005
 

Baltimore, MD – Representatives of several ABET member societies gathered at the organization’s headquarters today to help kick off the Participation Project, ABET’s human resources management initiative.  Some societies participated via web conference.  Represented were the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME); the American Society of Agricultural Engineers (ASAE); the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE); the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE); the Minerals, Metals, and Materials Society (TMS); the American Industrial Hygiene Association (AIHA); the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE); the Institute of Industrial Engineers (IIE); the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE); the American Nuclear Society (ANS); and ISA-The Instrumentation, Systems, and Automation Society.  This meeting was particularly meaningful, given the ABET member societies’ pivotal role in providing ABET with the volunteers who carry out the accreditation process.  The purpose of the Participation Project is to develop a formalized method to recruit, select, train, and assess those volunteers.  In order to be successful, the project must intimately involve the ABET societies.

 During the four-hour meeting, society representatives were presented with status information on the Participation Project, which is currently in the first of five phases, and had a chance to meet the consulting group leading the project, Cardea Communications.  Participants also contributed to the project by sharing their best practices and outlining their challenges.  Cardea Communications will use this information throughout their work on the project.

 Phase I, the current phase of the Participation Project, is nearly complete.  Focusing on needs assessment and gap analysis, phase I has included almost 40 one-on-one interviews and more than 1,400 web-based surveys.  Cardea has also observed program evaluator training and is benchmarking human resources management within other volunteer agencies.  Phase II and III of the project will involve designing and testing the formalized ABET participation program, which will include the four major areas of volunteer recruitment, selection, training, and assessment.  Phase IV will involve revising the participation program based on successes and shortcomings and implementing the final product throughout the organization.  Phase V will build into the program continuous evaluation, assessment, and improvement processes.  The entire project is expected to be complete by the end of 2006.

 The deliverables of the completed project include the following: 

  • Criteria for volunteer selection at all levels.

  • Process for volunteer recruitment.

  • Comprehensive training and certification program, including trainer training and evaluator retraining, team chair training, Executive Committee member training, Board member/committee member training.

  • Process for volunteer performance evaluation, including mechanisms for recognition, remediation, and removal at all levels.

  • Organizational plan that delineates the roles and responsibilities of the societies, volunteers, commissions, Board, and ABET staff in these processes.

  • Strategies for continuous improvement of the participation program.

 “We have more than 1,500 volunteers—experts—carrying out ABET’s accreditation processes.  We need to engage them, motivate them,” says George Peterson, ABET Executive Director.  “We have reformed our accreditation criteria and are continually improving our accreditation processes.  It is now time to pay close attention to our precious human resources, to make sure we are consistently giving them what they need to be the best.  ABET is its volunteers.  That is the heart of the Participation Project.”

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 ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 30 professional and technical societies representing these fields.  Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for over 70 years.  ABET currently accredits some 2,600 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide.  Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities.  ABET also provides leadership internationally through agreements such as the Washington Accord, and offers educational credentials evaluation services through ECEI to those educated abroad.  ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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ABET Executive Director Named One of Technology’s ’50 Most Important Blacks’ for 2005

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 13, 2004

Baltimore, MD – George D. Peterson, Ph.D., P.E., Executive Director of ABET, Inc., has been selected by the editors of US Black Engineer & Information Technology magazine for the prestigious “50 Most Important Blacks in Technology” list for 2005. The list will be published in the January/February 2005 issue of the magazine, which is distributed nationwide to engineering colleges and information technology professionals.

Honorees are chosen for this annual list based on their work in making technology part of global society. As a member of the 2005 list, Peterson will be presented to the nation’s young people as a role model, his accomplishments highlighted as examples of the important contributions made daily by the millions of Black men and women working in technology around the world.

Peterson and the list’s other honorees will gather for a colloquium and awards dinner on February 18 in Baltimore, an event to be held in conjunction with the 19th annual Black Engineer of the Year Awards. The colloquium will focus on increasing Black entrepreneurship, executive development, and educational readiness for the digital economy.

A former electrical engineering program evaluator and Engineering Accreditation Commission (EAC) Chair, Peterson has served as ABET’s Executive Director for more than a decade. His previous positions include Chair of the Department of Electrical Engineering at the U.S. Naval Academy and Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs and Professor of Electrical Engineering at Morgan State University. In addition to leading ABET, Peterson is currently Chair of the Specialized and Professional Advisory Panel and member of the Committee on Recognition of the Council for Higher Education Accreditation; Vice-Chair of the Engineering Workforce Commission of the American Association of Engineering Societies; and a former member of the Executive Council of Tau Beta Pi, the engineering honor society. Peterson also serves on the Board of Trustees of the Maryland Institute College of Art.

In 1972, while serving with the U.S. Air Force in Southeast Asia, Peterson was decorated with the Bronze Star. His other awards include the Black Engineer of the Year Award for the Promotion of Higher Education, the IEEE Meritorious Achievement Award in accreditation activities, the University of Illinois Electrical and Computer Engineering Alumni Association Distinguished Alumnus Award, and an honorary Doctor of Humanities degree from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University. Peterson is a Fellow of IEEE, a Fellow of ABET, and a Fellow of the Institution of Engineers of Ireland, and was recently selected as a Fellow of the Institution of Electrical Engineers of Great Britain.

Peterson earned his BS degree in electrical engineering from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, his MS in electrical engineering from the Air Force Institute of Technology, and his Ph.D. in electrical engineering from the University of Illinois. In 1988, he retired a Lieutenant Colonel following more than 20 years of armed service in the U.S. Air Force.

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ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 30 professional and technical societies representing these fields. Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for over 70 years. ABET currently accredits some 2,600 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide. Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities. ABET also provides leadership internationally through agreements such as the Washington Accord, and offers educational credentials evaluation services through ECEI to those educated abroad. ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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Assessment Expert Gloria Rogers to Join ABET Staff

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 1, 2005

Baltimore, MD – ABET, Inc., is pleased to announce that assessment expert Gloria M. Rogers, Ph.D., will be joining the ABET staff in mid-2005. Among her responsibilities will be the establishment of various assessment resources for ABET-accredited programs and the implementation of assessment workshops, seminars, and symposia for program faculty. Rogers will also play a key role in ABET’s own continuous process improvement efforts.

Rogers has had a close relationship with ABET since the mid-1990s, when the organization first developed its outcomes-based accreditation criteria. Rogers has played a major role in helping to implement the new criteria by assisting college programs in developing and practicing effective self-assessment. As a speaker and facilitator at most of ABET’s assessment workshops held over the last 10 years, Rogers has impacted the assessment practices of hundreds of ABET-accredited programs across the country.

Currently Vice President of Institutional Research, Planning, and Assessment at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, Rogers is responsible for strategic planning, support for faculty and institutional assessment of student learning, and institutional research. She coordinates the institutional accreditation process and assures compliance with educational regulatory agencies. She has organized seven national symposia at Rose-Hulman on “Best Assessment Processes” that have been attended by over 1,250 engineering educators from 375 institutions around the world.

Rogers has presented workshops and seminars on the development and implementation of outcomes assessment programs throughout the United States and twelve other countries. She serves as a review panel member for the National Science Foundation (NSF) and as a member of the Advisory Committee/Government Performance and Responsibility Act, which advises NSF on matters of compliance with Congressional mandates. Rogers is also a consultant-evaluator for the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association and a facilitator and presenter for the American Association of Higher Education and the Higher Learning Commission regional institutional workshops, “Changing Institutional Priorities.” She is the co-author of Stepping Ahead: An Assessment Plan Development Guide, which has been distributed to more than 10,000 faculty members throughout the country, has been the guest editor of a special assessment edition of the International Journal of Engineering Education, and is a guest columnist in Communications Link, the ABET newsletter. Rogers recently authored a CD-ROM titled Assessment Planning Flow Chart.

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ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 30 professional and technical societies representing these fields. Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for over 70 years. ABET currently accredits some 2,600 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide. Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities. ABET also provides leadership internationally through agreements such as the Washington Accord, and offers educational credentials evaluation services through ECEI to those educated abroad. ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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ABET Societies Gather to Help Kick Off Participation Project

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 11, 2005
 

Baltimore, MD – Representatives of several ABET member societies gathered at the organization’s headquarters today to help kick off the Participation Project, ABET’s human resources management initiative.  Some societies participated via web conference.  Represented were the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME); the American Society of Agricultural Engineers (ASAE); the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE); the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE); the Minerals, Metals, and Materials Society (TMS); the American Industrial Hygiene Association (AIHA); the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE); the Institute of Industrial Engineers (IIE); the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE); the American Nuclear Society (ANS); and ISA-The Instrumentation, Systems, and Automation Society.  This meeting was particularly meaningful, given the ABET member societies’ pivotal role in providing ABET with the volunteers who carry out the accreditation process.  The purpose of the Participation Project is to develop a formalized method to recruit, select, train, and assess those volunteers.  In order to be successful, the project must intimately involve the ABET societies.

 During the four-hour meeting, society representatives were presented with status information on the Participation Project, which is currently in the first of five phases, and had a chance to meet the consulting group leading the project, Cardea Communications.  Participants also contributed to the project by sharing their best practices and outlining their challenges.  Cardea Communications will use this information throughout their work on the project.

 Phase I, the current phase of the Participation Project, is nearly complete.  Focusing on needs assessment and gap analysis, phase I has included almost 40 one-on-one interviews and more than 1,400 web-based surveys.  Cardea has also observed program evaluator training and is benchmarking human resources management within other volunteer agencies.  Phase II and III of the project will involve designing and testing the formalized ABET participation program, which will include the four major areas of volunteer recruitment, selection, training, and assessment.  Phase IV will involve revising the participation program based on successes and shortcomings and implementing the final product throughout the organization.  Phase V will build into the program continuous evaluation, assessment, and improvement processes.  The entire project is expected to be complete by the end of 2006.

 The deliverables of the completed project include the following: 

  • Criteria for volunteer selection at all levels.

  • Process for volunteer recruitment.

  • Comprehensive training and certification program, including trainer training and evaluator retraining, team chair training, Executive Committee member training, Board member/committee member training.

  • Process for volunteer performance evaluation, including mechanisms for recognition, remediation, and removal at all levels.

  • Organizational plan that delineates the roles and responsibilities of the societies, volunteers, commissions, Board, and ABET staff in these processes.

  • Strategies for continuous improvement of the participation program.

 “We have more than 1,500 volunteers—experts—carrying out ABET’s accreditation processes.  We need to engage them, motivate them,” says George Peterson, ABET Executive Director.  “We have reformed our accreditation criteria and are continually improving our accreditation processes.  It is now time to pay close attention to our precious human resources, to make sure we are consistently giving them what they need to be the best.  ABET is its volunteers.  That is the heart of the Participation Project.”

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 ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 30 professional and technical societies representing these fields.  Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for over 70 years.  ABET currently accredits some 2,600 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide.  Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities.  ABET also provides leadership internationally through agreements such as the Washington Accord, and offers educational credentials evaluation services through ECEI to those educated abroad.  ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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Policy Statements on Diversity Approved, Endorsed by ABET Board of Directors

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 20, 2004

Baltimore, MD - At its March 20 meeting, the Board of Directors of ABET, Inc., the recognized accrediting body for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, unanimously voted to approve a statement of policy on diversity proposed by its Diversity Task Group. Also, at the same meeting, the ABET Board of Directors voted to endorse the American Association of Engineering Societies (AAES) diversity policy statement. Other organizations that have endorsed the statement include the American Society of Civil Engineers, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, and the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. More organizations are expected to follow suit.

“I am very proud that these statements moved forward during my term of leadership,” says John D. Lorenz, ABET President and Kettering University Provost and Vice President of Academic Affairs. “Valuing and respecting our differences, encouraging diversity in our programs and professions, seeking to build an organization that truly reflects the community it serves-these are all priorities for ABET. The Board’s approval and endorsement of these statements is a considerable step in the right direction.”

The ABET statement of policy on diversity is as follows:

ABET is committed to developing and using the talents of all qualified persons who study or work in the applied science, computing, engineering, and technology professions. We respect the human qualities, both similarities and differences, present in the work and study environments of our constituencies as they are affected by our efforts to assure quality and stimulate innovation. The actions of ABET’s program evaluators, commissioners, staff, and Board of Directors must demonstrate and confirm respect for each other and the contributions that each of us can make. Our professions benefit from the creativity and constructive improvements best informed and achieved by persons with varied perspectives, experiences, and talents who work toward shared goals.

Differences and similarities among the ABET constituency include, but are not limited to:

age and experience
economic status
education and training
employment history
gender
job level
physical and mental abilities
professional employment
race, nationality, and ethnicity
religion
sexual orientation
ways of learning and communicating

Each ABET staff member and volunteer program evaluator, commissioner, or member of the Board of Directors should observe this policy when conducting ABET activities.

The AAES diversity policy statement is as follows:

“Engineering a diverse future for the engineering profession”

The undersigned representatives of the engineering community support the opportunity for successful participation of all people in the engineering profession without regard to race, ethnicity, religion, age, gender, sexual orientation, nationality, or physical challenges. Working both individually and collectively, we will promulgate and implement strategic programs designed to effect measurable changes in the engineering infrastructure that support the academic and professional achievements of all.

Diversity enriches the educational experience and improves the practice of engineering. We learn from those whose experiences, beliefs, and perspectives are different from our own. These lessons can be taught and learned best in an intellectual and social environment that encourages candor and respect in the expression of difference.

The engineering profession plays a central role in improving the quality of life for people around the world. If our profession is to continue making that contribution, we must

  • engage the knowledge and talents of our diverse population,
  • increase the viability of engineering as a career option for all individuals, and
  • promote the pursuit of engineering careers.

Within the U.S., women, African-Americans, Hispanics, and Native Americans continue to be particularly under-represented in engineering. While some progress has been made, increased participation by these groups becomes even more critical as the demographics of the population and the workforce continue to change.

Therefore, the undersigned commit their engineering organizations to a goal of diversity with equity through:

establishing as a priority the education, recruitment, retention, and advancement of all people in engineering and technology education and the engineering profession;

building collaborations and linking or aligning efforts among engineering societies, corporations, educational institutions, foundations and governmental bodies that share a commitment to these aims; and

focusing our resources on efforts with the greatest evidence of impact.

Through a collaborative approach we can ensure a diverse and viable future for the engineering profession, a future that maximizes the profession’s benefits to society.

For more information on ABET’s diversity policies and practices, please contact Maryanne Weiss, ABET Director of Education and Information Services, at 410-347-7700.

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ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 30 professional and technical societies representing these fields. Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for over 70 years. ABET currently accredits some 2,600 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide. Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities. ABET also provides leadership internationally through agreements such as the Washington Accord, and offers educational credentials evaluation services to those educated abroad through ECEI. ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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BMES Membership Ratified

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 18, 2003

Baltimore, MD – ABET, Inc., the accreditation organization dedicated to ensuring quality in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology education, announces that the Biomedical Engineering Society (BMES) has received full ratification by the ABET societies, and will now join ABET as a Member Society, effective immediately. ABET Member Societies take lead responsibilities in program accreditation, hold seats on the ABET accreditation commission(s), and have at least one voting representative on the ABET Board of Directors. BMES will have the lead responsibility for biomedical engineering programs. The ABET Board approved the admission of BMES as a Member Society in November 2002, subject to ratification by two-thirds of the organization’s Member Societies. ABET is one of the largest federations of professional and technical societies in the U.S. With the addition of BMES, those societies now total 32.

“ABET is extremely pleased with the ratification of BMES,” says ABET President Larry Nixon. “As the disciplines we dedicate ourselves to continue to shift and grow, so must this organization. It is our ability to do so that makes ABET a leader in the world’s educational community.”

The Biomedical Engineering Society was incorporated in Illinois on February 1, 1968, in response to a need to provide a professional society that gave equal status to representatives of both biomedical and engineering interests. As stated in the organization’s Articles of Incorporation, the purpose of BMES is “to promote the increase of biomedical engineering knowledge and its utilization.” The organization has approximately 3,700 members, including over 2,000 student members.

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ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 32 professional and technical societies representing these fields. Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for over 70 years. ABET currently accredits some 2,500 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide. Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities. ABET also provides leadership internationally through agreements such as the Washington Accord, and offers educational credentials evaluation services through ECEI to those educated abroad. ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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ABET Recognized by Council for Higher Education Accreditation

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 21, 2003

Baltimore, MD - ABET, Inc., the accreditation body dedicated to ensuring quality in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology education, recently received renewed recognition status from the Council for Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA). Established by Presidents of American universities and colleges, CHEA is the largest institutional higher education membership organization in the United States, boasting 3,000 colleges and universities as members. The purposes of its recognition process are to advance academic quality, demonstrate accountability, and encourage purposeful change and needed improvement. The recognition granted to ABET by CHEA extends for 10 ten years, the maximum period allotted by the organization.

In order to be eligible for CHEA recognition, an organization must demonstrate that its mission and scope are consistent with the CHEA Institutional Eligibility and Recognition Policy. ABET demonstrated compliance with the following five recognition standards as outlined by CHEA*:

Advance academic quality. Accreditors are required to have a clear definition of quality and clear expectations that the institutions or programs they accredit have processes to determine whether quality standards are being met.

Demonstrate accountability. Accreditors are required to have standards that call for institutions and programs to provide consistent, reliable information about academic quality and student achievement to foster continuing public confidence and investment.

Encourage purposeful change and needed improvement. Accreditors are required to encourage planning for purposeful change and scrutiny for needed improvement through ongoing self-examination in institutions and programs.

Employ appropriate and fair procedures in decision-making. Accreditors are required to maintain appropriate and fair organizational policies and procedures that include effective checks and balances.

Continually reassess accreditation practices. Accreditors are required to undertake self-scrutiny of their accrediting activities.

*Full, official text of the CHEA recognition standards can be found in the CHEA Recognition Policy and Procedures.

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ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 31 professional and technical societies representing these fields. Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for over 70 years. ABET currently accredits some 2,500 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide. Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities. ABET also provides leadership internationally through agreements such as the Washington Accord, and offers educational credentials evaluation services to those educated abroad through ECEI. ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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David Hornbeck Named Adjunct Accreditation Director for Technology

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 21, 2003

Baltimore, MD – ABET, Inc., the accreditation body dedicated to ensuring quality in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology education, has named David E. Hornbeck the Adjunct Accreditation Director for Technology, effective immediately. Hornbeck brings 20 years of ABET experience to the position, having served the organization since 1983 as a program evaluator, commissioner, and commission Chair, among many other roles.

“We are so pleased to be working with Dave on yet another level,” says ABET Executive Director George Peterson. “He has such tremendous experience in technology accreditation. I know he will be a real asset to both the Technology Accreditation Commission (TAC) and the many programs it serves.”

Among his responsibilities, Hornbeck will provide guidance to institutions with programs seeking initial or continuing TAC accreditation. He will also assist in the implementation of the commission’s new outcomes-based criteria by coordinating commission and program evaluator training, faculty workshops, and institutional orientations.

Currently, Hornbeck is the Interim Vice President for Academic Affairs and a professor of civil engineering technology at Southern Polytechnic State University of Marietta, Georgia, where he has been employed since 1976. Earlier in his career at Southern Polytechnic, he served as a faculty member and department head of the civil engineering technology program. More recently, Hornbeck completed a leave from the university to serve in the System Office of the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia.

During his 20 years of service to ABET, Hornbeck served on a variety of committees, including the ad hoc committee that developed the original draft of outcomes-based criteria for TAC. He twice later chaired the TAC Criteria Committee. Hornbeck is a Past-Chair of TAC, and acted as a member of the TAC Executive Committee from 1998 to 2003. He has been very active in ABET training and outreach activities, and currently serves as a project advisory team member and a facilitator of the ABET/NSF Technological Education Initiative (TEI) workshops. He has also served on a number of ABET-wide committees, including chairing the Accreditation Council from 2001 to 2003.

Hornbeck holds a Ph.D. in civil engineering (geotechnical) from the Georgia Institute of Technology, an MS in civil engineering (structures) from Vanderbilt University, and a BS in civil engineering from the West Virginia Institute of Technology. His non-academic experience includes work in the coal mining industry and consulting in geotechnical and structural engineering; he is a licensed professional engineer and land surveyor. In addition to his activities with ABET, he is a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers and the American Society for Engineering Education.

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ABET, Inc., the recognized accreditor for college and university programs in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology, is a federation of 32 professional and technical societies representing these fields. Among the most respected accreditation organizations in the U.S., ABET has provided leadership and quality assurance in higher education for over 70 years. ABET currently accredits some 2,500 programs at over 550 colleges and universities nationwide. Over 1,500 dedicated volunteers participate annually in ABET activities. ABET also provides leadership internationally through agreements such as the Washington Accord, and offers educational credentials evaluation services through ECEI to those educated abroad. ABET is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

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  Events
Institute for the Development of Excellence in Assessment Leadership (IDEAL)
Jan. 5-9


Commission Executive Committee Meetings
Jan. 16-18


Full Registration Deadline for Faculty Workshop on Assessing Program Outcomes in Phoenix
Feb. 3
...more     
  Latest News

Now Accepting Applications
for ABET Executive Director Position


Peterson to Become ABET Managing Director for International Business Development

2008 Grinter, Fellows, Diversity Awards Presented

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