»¨Ľľ´«Ă˝ Receives Accreditation

AJU Students

»¨Ľľ´«Ă˝ announced on July 29 that the Western Association of Schools and Colleges’ Senior College and University Commission has reaffirmed its accreditation for a period of eight years. This decision follows a comprehensive institutional report, review process and site visit.

In its final summation, the WSCUC Commission praised AJU’s learning outcomes, rooted in Judaic principles, and acknowledged the institution’s dedicated board of directors for their commitment to AJU’s mission and future direction. The WSCUC also commended AJU’s robust advancement team, systems and processes that effectively cultivate donor and philanthropic efforts.

“AJU’s senior leadership team has shepherded the institution through critical transition periods, and the academic deans, faculty and staff have reimagined academic programs to reduce barriers related to access, cost and time to degree,” stated the WSCUC Evaluating Team Report of AJU.

AJU’s institutional report to WSCUC focused on its formal academic programs, notably its two schools with degree programs: the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies, which offers an in-person MA in rabbinic studies and ordains conservative rabbis, and the Masor School for Jewish Education and Leadership, which has online early childhood educational programming at the BA, MA, and EdD degrees and certificate levels. AJU’s newest program with formal academic credit, the Jewish Learning Experience, delivering undergraduate-level college credit courses to high school students in Jewish studies, was also included in the review.

Further highlights included AJU’s community programming: open Learning and the Whizin Center for Continuing Education; the Sigi Ziering Institute of Holocaust Studies; the Maas Center and its signature Miller Introduction to Judaism program; Camp Alonim; and the ZieringBrandeis Camp Institute.

“»¨Ľľ´«Ă˝ is committed to fostering lifelong learning and cultural enrichment while fostering a sense of Jewish identity,” AJU President Jeffrey Herbst said. “The WSCUC notice is not just a validation of our current practices but an affirmation of our future.”

»¨Ľľ´«Ă˝ has been accredited by the WSCUC since 1961. The reaffirmation for accreditation process and analysis involved an in-depth examination of AJU’s strategic planning, quality assurance, faculty involvement, financial sustainability and mission integrity. Achieving WSCUC institutional accreditation assures that AJU has met high standards of quality, effectiveness and educational excellence.

“During this transformational period, »¨Ľľ´«Ă˝ has remained committed to providing high-quality for-credit classes, degrees and community programming,” AJU Chief Academic Officer Robbie Totten said. “This milestone affirms these efforts and reflects our unwavering loyalty to our university’s mission of advancing and elevating Jewish journeys.”

For information, visit aju.edu.

 

As originally posted by Beverly Press:  

 

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Michelle Starkman, M.A., MBA

Vice President, Communications

michelle.starkmanataju.edu

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