For many Program Directors and Department Chairs, being named the “Accreditation Lead” feels less like a professional appointment and more like a high-pressure life sentence. The common narrative involves a single, exhausted individual sequestered in an office, frantically “checking boxes” and manufacturing a report in the final months before a deadline. This episodic, solo approach is not only a recipe for burnout; it is a significant risk to the program’s accredited status and its long-term quality.
True excellence requires moving away from the “compliance trap” and toward a model of systematic organizational memory. By treating accreditation as a “guiding star”—a refined strategic plan for success—rather than an intermittent bother, you can transform the process into a manageable, integrated part of everyday program work.
The following strategies outline how to build a sustainable succession pipeline by embedding accreditation into the fabric of your program’s culture.
1. Start Early: Building the Leadership Progression
Sustainable leadership is not found in a last-minute hand-off; it is built through intentional scaffolding. Because program-level leadership often rotates every few years, the “why” behind the standards can easily be lost during transitions.
The ideal progression for a future program leader should follow a clear trajectory:
- New Contributor: Assisting with data collection or drafting small sections for a single sub-criterion.
- Significant Contributor: Managing narratives and evidence for a full standard grouping (e.g., Curriculum or Student Support).
- Peer Reviewer: Volunteering for an accrediting agency to gain an external “reviewer’s lens”.
- Accreditation Leader: Stepping into the oversight role with years of foundational context and a deep understanding of the “spirit” of the standards.
By identifying potential successors years before a transition, you ensure that institutional memory remains intact and the program is “always reviewer ready”.
2. The “Standard Steward” Model: Distributing Ownership
The most effective way to involve faculty and reduce the burden on a single person is to assign specific standards or sub-criteria to individuals based on their expertise. This is the “Standard Steward” model.
- Faculty Stewards: Since faculty are the primary deliverers of the educational experience, they should own the standards related to teaching, learning, and curriculum.
- Data Stewards: Assign a faculty member with quantitative skills to monitor assessment data, professional exam pass rates, and graduation trends.
- Evidence Librarians: Task a detail-oriented team member with the systematic organization, naming, and version control of documentation throughout the year.
This distributed model ensures that “trust but verify” becomes a shared responsibility rather than a personal interrogation by an external team.
3. Institutionalize the Dialogue: Accreditation as “Everyday Work”
Accreditation should not be a “special project” discussed only when a site visit is looming. To maintain a culture of readiness, it must have a standing place in the program’s daily rhythm:
The Standing Agenda Item
Include a permanent “Accreditation Update” in every department meeting. Use this time to discuss evolving agency policies or recent changes in professional licensure requirements. This normalizes the conversation, shifting it from a “bureaucratic burden” to a dialogue about quality.
The Semesterly Status Check
Twice a year, have your “Standard Stewards” present a brief status report to the full faculty.
- What was collected? Identify the evidence gathered during the term (e.g., capstone rubrics or advisory board minutes).
- What are the gaps? Conduct “reality testing” to see if the program’s actual practices match the written policies.
- What is the impact? Discuss tangible improvements, such as how a curriculum change led to higher student success rates.
4. Don’t Keep the Fun to Yourself: Supporting Peer Reviewers
One of the most powerful recruitment tactics for future leaders is encouraging faculty to become peer reviewers (site visitors) for your accrediting agency. Accreditation work is a high-level strategic participation that advances careers and professional standing.
- Professional Development & Networking: Serving as a reviewer allows faculty to network with experts in their field and see how other top-tier programs operate.
- The “Reviewer’s Lens”: Faculty who serve on visiting teams bring back invaluable insight into how to “ACE” (Accurate, Contextualized, Engaging) their own evidence files.
- Exporting Expertise: Support faculty by providing the time and resources needed to attend accreditor meetings. Take them with you to conferences and involve them in discussions with your accreditation liaison.
When faculty see the “inner workings” of quality assurance, they transition from passive participants to active advocates for the program.
5. Using the “Guiding Star” for Continuous Improvement
Ultimately, succession planning is easier when the work is meaningful. Shift the program’s focus from “Proof of Activity” (we held a meeting) to “Proof of Impact” (students are learning more effectively).
When accreditation standards are used to guide complex change rather than enforce rigidity, they become a catalyst for renewal. A collaborative approach ensures that the program’s story of success is told with “one voice” and supported by a preponderance of factual evidence.
Conclusion: A Legacy of Quality
Accreditation is an ongoing journey of organizational learning. By involving a broad base of faculty and maintaining a steady cadence of evidence collection, you move your program from the stress of “meeting the standard” to the satisfaction of elevating the quality of education your students receive. Start building your legacy today by inviting others into the process—it is the only way to ensure your program remains “always reviewer ready” long after your tenure as leader ends.