"Rough Ride for Law School Accreditor":

Inside Higher Ed reports:

The National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and Integrity, which advises the education secretary on accreditation, found the ABA's Council of the Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar to be systematically guilty of a pattern of ambiguity and inconsistency, as recommended in a report prepared by the education department's staff. But, in a startling series of events, the advisory committee overruled the staff finding that the ABA council had overstepped its authority in introducing a newly revised and broadly written "equal opportunity and diversity standard" ( Standard 212, formerly known as 211) requiring law schools to "demonstrate by concrete action" their commitment to a diverse student body.

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While the council was spared on the diversity issue, it was sacked on a lot of other fronts. Rather than having its authority extended for the typical five-year period, its recognition was extended for just 18 months. The council was criticized for, among other things, inconsistent and unclear measures regarding acceptable bar passage rates and insufficient training for accrediting teams.

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