SACS
LIFTS AUBURN'S PROBATION
The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS)
announced Dec. 7 that it had lifted the one-year probation it
placed on Auburn University last December.
"I
am extremely pleased that SACS' Commission on Colleges has
removed Auburn University's probationary status," said
AU Interim President Ed Richardson. "Clearing this university's
name with regard to its accreditation status has been my top
priority since assuming the interim presidency at Auburn.
I have been confident all along that we would hear the news
we've heard today.
"With
this episode behind us, it is now time for all of us within
the Auburn family --- students, faculty, staff, administrators
and alumni --- to work together and to renew our efforts toward
making Auburn everything that it needs to be --- an outstanding
learning environment for students, a leader in innovative
research and an important economic engine for the state of
Alabama.
"It
is our understanding that SACS will ask Auburn to submit a
progress report by Sept. 22, 2005," Richardson added.
"We fully intend to provide SACS with every report they
request." (Full
statement by Interim President Ed Richardson)
SACS
placed Auburn on probation last year based on allegations
contained in a complaint filed in 2001 by a Joint Assessment
Committee of the University Senate. The university and the
Board of Trustees began immediately to address SACS' recommendations
--- all aimed at matters dealing with university governance.
A
SACS special committee visited Auburn in September and interviewed
several AU faculty, administrators and students. It filed
a report in November that contained three recommendations:
that the university establish a method for presidential evaluation;
that members of the Board of Trustees individually sign documents
indicating their commitment to the accreditation process;
and that the Board of Trustees take appropriate actions to
ensure that it lives up to its own Code of Ethics and to ensure
that the Board is not controlled by a minority of its members.
Upon
receiving the report of the Special Committee, Auburn took
steps to comply fully with all three recommendations.
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