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Emergency Alert
UDC Operating Remotely Through Wednesday, Jan. 28

The University of the District of Columbia’s academic and administrative offices will conduct business remotely on Tuesday, January 27 and Wednesday, January 28. All on-campus activities, including athletic-related activities, are cancelled.

Staff: Contact your immediate supervisor with questions or for further instruction regarding remote work expectations. 

Faculty: Reach out to your immediate supervisor and/or the dean for questions and further instruction regarding the transition to emergency remote instruction (ERI).  The Center for the Advancement of Learning (CAL) is available to support faculty with instructional continuity, including support for Blackboard, Zoom, Webex and other teaching and learning technologies. 

CAL Faculty Support Resources

calhelpdesk@udc.edu 
Virtual Office Hours
Consultation Request Form
For learning technology tools and on-demand faculty resources, please visit CAL’s website.

Students: Due to inclement weather, the university will be closed to face-to-face operations. Instruction will be moved to emergency remote, including synchronous and asynchronous methods. Certain laboratory, clinical, and other hands-on classes for which in-person instruction is a requirement may necessitate a make-up lesson, but every effort will be made to pursue virtual learning to the extent possible. Where synchronous virtual instruction is intended, published class meeting times must be observed so that students’ schedules are not disrupted.

The safety and security of our students, faculty, staff, and the broader community remain our top priority. We will continue to provide updates regarding the status of the university’s academic and administrative offices as conditions change.

Please continue to check our website and social media channels for the latest information.

If you have any safety concerns, contact OPSEM at 202-274-5050. For all immediate emergencies, call 911. 

Thank you for your continued dedication to our students and to UDC’s mission. 

Members of the UDC Middle States Self Study team

Accreditation

Accreditation and Reaffirmation

As part of its accreditation review cycle, the University of the District of Columbia is deeply engaged in its Self-Study evaluation process, in anticipation of a peer evaluator site visit in Spring 2025. Accreditation serves to validate UDC’s academic quality, ensure continuous improvements, and uphold public accountability. This comprehensive evaluation encompasses all facets of the university’s mission and its effectiveness as an institution of higher education.

While UDC is already accredited, we are required to reaffirm our accreditation every eight years. Preparing for our next reaffirmation site visit in early 2025 involves over two years of groundwork, including the comprehensive institutional Self-Study report and supporting evidence.

Our accrediting body is the Middle States Commission of Higher Education (MSCHE), or simply “Middle States.” Middle States will evaluate UDC based on seven Standards of Accreditation, fourteen Requirements of Affiliation, and several federal and state-level compliance areas. Each of the Standards includes specific criteria that must be met and will be assessed by the Middle States team.

Middle States Commission on Higher Education (MSCHE)

The Middle States Commission on Higher Education operates as a voluntary, non-governmental membership association committed to ensuring quality assurance and enhancement through peer evaluation and accreditation. By upholding rigorous accreditation standards and enforcing them, Middle States fosters public confidence in an institution’s mission, goals, performance, and resources. Once an institution is initially accredited by the Middle States, it then engages in an ongoing eight-year cycle of review to retain its accredited status. This cycle includes regular reporting of the Annual Institutional Update, responses to any Middle States inquiries or policy revisions, and substantive change reports to reflect any major modifications to institutional operations, governance structure, or locations. The major review process completed every eight years is known as the Institutional Self-Study. UDC leverages the Self-Study as an opportunity to involve faculty, staff, administration, and other stakeholders in an in-depth analysis of the University’s strengths and areas for improvement. The three main outcomes of a successful Self-Study site visit are: 1) An inclusive campus process, 2) Demonstration of continuous improvement, and 3) Reaffirmation.

Visit the MSCHE website

The Self-Study process is a substantial undertaking, typically spanning two years from initiation to completion. The process reaches its pinnacle with a three-day on-campus visit from a team of external peer evaluators. During this visit, the evaluation team engages with administration, faculty, staff, students, and members of the Board of Trustees. They review materials and reports gathered throughout the Self-Study process. Following the three-day visit, the team provides a recommendation to the Commission regarding the university’s accreditation status.

Contact Us

For questions or comments related to the Middle States Reaffirmation process, please contact Associate Chief Academic Officer and Professor of English, Dr. Scott T. Krawczyk, at scott.krawczyk@udc.edu

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