Feds Bust Bad Colleges: Accreditation Reform Targets Debt Traps
Published Date: 4/28/2025
Presidential Document
Summary
The government is shaking up how colleges get approved to make sure students get a real, quality education worth their money. This change affects colleges, students, and taxpayers by focusing on graduation rates and job success instead of political ideas. Starting soon, accreditors must prioritize student outcomes, and schools could see new rules that impact federal funding and accountability.
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Analyzed Economic Effects
5 provisions identified: 5 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Accreditors May Lose Federal Recognition
The Secretary of Education can deny, monitor, suspend, or terminate recognition of accreditors who require institutions to engage in unlawful discrimination, including through "diversity, equity, and inclusion" accreditation standards. The order says federal recognition will not be provided to accreditors engaging in unlawful discrimination.
Investigations of Law and Medical Accreditors
The Attorney General and the Secretary of Education will investigate and may take action to end unlawful discrimination by the American Bar Association Council, the Liaison Committee on Medical Education, and the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. The Secretary shall assess whether to suspend or terminate those accrediting agencies' federal recognition.
Accreditation Must Focus on Program Outcomes
The Secretary will require accreditors to mandate that member institutions use program-level student outcomes data to improve those outcomes, and that such use be made "without reference to race, ethnicity, or sex." This shifts accreditation emphasis toward graduation and job-related results.
New Accreditors and Experimental Quality Pathways
The Secretary will resume recognizing new accreditors to increase competition and accountability and will launch an experimental site under section 487A(b) of the Higher Education Act to create flexible, streamlined quality-assurance pathways for institutions. The goal is to accelerate innovation and improve accountability in higher education.
Stop Credential Inflation That Raises Costs
The order prohibits accreditors from engaging in practices that result in credential inflation that burdens students with additional unnecessary costs. The intent is to prevent accreditors from requiring extra credentials that add expense without value.
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