Lengthy accreditation procedures are the greatest bureaucratic burden for private universities.

Bureaucracy burdens universities
Seven of the ten most frequently cited hurdles fall into this category. According to Ottmar Schneck, Chairman of the VPH Board, the reason for this is inadequate structures within the relevant committees. "The private higher education market is booming, and the structures of the accreditation institutions are not designed for this," Schneck told the Funke newspapers. "That's why decisions regarding accreditation at the Accreditation Council often take a very long time." This also has very concrete financial consequences for program accreditations. As long as a degree program is not accredited, private universities are not allowed to offer it. "If the Accreditation Council, which meets at longer intervals, postpones the decision until the next meeting, this could mean a postponement of the start date by an entire semester." Furthermore, accreditations are often only granted for five years instead of ten. "One procedure takes about two years. So the universities are constantly dealing with very complex procedures," explains Schneck. He is therefore pushing for streamlining the process and speeding up procedures. "We consider the quality assurance procedures to be good; it is in the interest of private universities that dubious providers are weeded out," said VPH head Schneck. "But the process must be simplified."
ad-hoc-news




