By Colin Nelson
Recently, I’ve been doing some deeper analysis of the data from AACSB’s most recent Collaborations Survey in support of our upcoming Management Education Forum on Developing High-Impact Collaborations. While doing so, I noticed that there were significant differences between AACSB-accredited reporting schools and reporting schools without AACSB accreditation in the proportion of partnerships with other schools by accreditation status.
Figure 1. Reported Partnerships by AACSB Accreditation Status
Source: AACSB International Collaborations Survey 2010-11. Note: This chart does not account for the 45 reported partnerships with non-business academic units or non-educational institutions, for whom accreditation is not applicable.
As a reminder, partnerships in the context of our survey denote a one-to-one relationship between two institutions involved in a collaboration. A reporting school can have one or many partnerships within a single given collaboration.
As you can see, nearly 45% of all partnerships reported by AACSB-accredited schools were with other AACSB-accredited schools. By contrast, less than a quarter of the partnerships reported by schools without AACSB accreditation were with AACSB-accredited schools.
There are a number of different reasons why this difference might exist. AACSB-accredited schools may desire (or simply have the ability) to exercise greater discrimination in their choices of whom to collaborate with. After all, if your partner is also accredited, there is less need to be concerned about whether they can deliver the same level of quality on their part of any collaborative arrangement, so allying with another accredited school may be more attractive as a result.
It is also worth noting that this pattern of partner selection does not necessarily apply universally when you break the total number of partnerships down by the different types of activity we track:
Table 1. Percentage of Reported Partnerships, by Activity Type and Partner Accreditation Status
Activity Type |
Accredited Reporting Schools |
Non-accredited Reporting Schools |
||
Accredited Partner |
Non-accredited Partner |
Accredited Partner |
Non-accredited Partner |
|
Articulation/ Twinning Agreement |
15.8% |
84.2% |
25.0% |
75.0% |
Dual Degree (or Multiple Degree) |
36.5% |
63.5% |
33.0% |
67.0% |
Faculty Activity |
45.2% |
54.8% |
17.4% |
82.6% |
Franchise Agreement |
14.3% |
85.7% |
0.0% |
100% |
Joint Degree |
51.0% |
49.0% |
17.7% |
82.3% |
Non-Degree/ Executive Education |
54.6% |
45.4% |
35.7% |
64.3% |
Shared Resources |
53.9% |
46.1% |
32.5% |
67.5% |
Study Abroad/ Student Exchange |
45.5% |
54.5% |
24.1% |
75.9% |
Validation Agreement |
0.0% |
100% |
33.3% |
66.7% |
Other |
47.0% |
53.0% |
15.3% |
84.7% |
Source: AACSB International Collaborations Survey 2010-11. Note: This table does not account for the 45 reported partnerships with non-business academic units or non-educational institutions, for whom accreditation is not applicable.
More than 80% of all partnerships reported by AACSB-accredited schools involving Articulation/Twinning, Franchise, and Validation Agreements are with partners that do not have AACSB accreditation. This makes sense, of course, because accredited schools are much less likely to have need of AACSB-accredited partners for these types of collaborative activities. On the other hand, when it comes to partnerships involving Joint Degrees, Non-Degree/Executive Education, and Shared Resources, AACSB-accredited schools show a clear preference for partners who are likewise AACSB-accredited.
Ute,
I'm actually working on the analysis for the 2013-14 Collaboration Survey results right now. If there's enough interest in an update on this post, I'll be glad to do so when I'm finished!
Posted by: Colin | 09 February 2015 at 08:45
Based on the analysis data, it states that there are differences from each other. If there's an update on this, that would be appreciated.
Posted by: Ute Tray | 09 February 2015 at 07:32
I can see your point here partnering with a collaborative school.And with that, you will have the authority or the ability to exercise with your decision making in allying with another accredited school.You have a substantial survey!
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Posted by: Business Collaboration | 07 November 2012 at 01:41
Bookkeeper,
It's definitely not an issue for the partner of an AACSB-accredited school to be non-accredited themselves. In cases of collaborative activities such as franchise, twinning or validation agreements, for example, it actually makes sense that an accredited school would have a non-accredited partner more often than not, since another accredited school would generally have less need for the prestige and brand-value that a program offered in collaboration with an accredited partner brings. Nevertheless, AACSB-accredited schools must be careful to ensure that all programs that fall under the scope of accreditation are properly assessed, including those that involve partner institutions, accredited or otherwise.
Posted by: Colin | 19 September 2012 at 08:59
Congratulations for your survey and for producing a deep analysis in your research. From its result, I think it's not necessary to have ACSB accreditation for these collaborative activities.
Posted by: Bookkeeper Sunshine Coast | 19 September 2012 at 08:47
Larry,
Essentially, yes, though of course a peer-review team can and should ensure that the accredited institution has policies and procedures in place to make certain that any coursework delivered by a non-accredited partner is of equal quality. To get at the thrust of your question, though, AACSB does not dictate the terms of its accredited schools' partnerships.
Posted by: Colin | 08 June 2012 at 08:18
So, transfer of coursework from a non-accredited institution to an AACSB institution is a choice of the accredited institution and not an AACSB guideline?
Posted by: Larry Gould | 07 June 2012 at 23:33