The Association
Mission Statement
Goals
Qualifications
Officers
Committees
DETC History
The Distance Education and Training Council
has been the standard-setting agency for correspondence study
and distance education institutions since it was established in
1926. Its purpose was, and still is today, "to foster and
preserve high quality, educationally sound and widely accepted
distance education and independent learning institutions."
The DETC Accrediting Commission performs the
institutional accrediting functions of the DETC. DETC member institutions
offer more than 500 different academic, vocational, and avocational
courses by mail or by telecommunications. These courses often
make use of specially written learning texts and quite often include
audio-visual training devices, job enhancing materials, tools,
computers, and other equipment. Course length ranges from a few
weeks to over four years of study. Although most distance study
institutions teach students entirely "at distance,"
some institutions offer courses which feature a combination of
distance study and resident training. DETC institutions vary in
size. Various Armed Forces distance study institutions have enrollments
of more than 200,000 students, while other schools may have fewer
than 200 students.
The DETC conducts a continuing professional
development program for distance study educators. Seminars and
conferences devoted to distance education are held each year and
are open to any individual with an interest in distance education.
Mission Statement
The mission of the DETC is to foster and preserve high quality,
educationally sound and widely accepted distance education and
independent learning institutions. It works to ensure that DETC
accredited distance learning remains a viable and effective method
of education and training for learners of all ages in all places.
DETC promotes institutional self-improvement, ensures academic
quality and aids its members in the quest for acceptance and excellence.
back
to top
Goals
The goals of the DETC are to:
(1) serve the members of the Council and to promote the
interest and general welfare of the distance education and independent
learning fields;
(2) establish standards for the operation and conduct of
distance education institutions and to provide for suitable accreditation
for organizations meeting these standards;
(3) promote the adoption of sound educational standards
and ethical business practices in the distance education and independent
learning fields;
(4) cooperate with public and private agencies at all levels
in the development and exchange of information helpful to the
advancement of the field of distance education and independent
learning fields;
(5) cooperate with local, state and federal authorities
in the maintenance of high standards and sound policies in the
fields of distance education and independent learning;
(6) conduct and promote research for the advancement of
distance education and independent learning; and
(7) undertake any activities necessary and proper for the
accomplishment of these goals, consistent with the public interest
and the interests of the distance education and independent learning
fields.
back
to top
Qualifications
Membership in the Council shall be limited to institutions that
offer instruction, assessment, and student services in the distance
education field and are accredited by the DETC Accrediting Commission.
The DETC Accrediting Commission may also accredit independent
learning institutions and establish associate membership category
groups.
back
to top
Officers & Staff
DETC OFFICERS:
The DETC Accrediting Commission governs the
Distance Education and Training Council. The officers are:
 |
Jan M. Larson,
Chair, Managing Partner, PricewaterhouseCoopers* |
 |
Dr. Gary L. Seevers,
Vice Chair, Vice President of Academic Affairs,
Global University |
 |
Michael P. Lambert*
Secretary and Executive Director |
 |
Brook Ellis
Treasurer , Gemological Institute of America |
*Not members of the Commission
back
to top
Committees
The DETC Accrediting Commission Chair appoints all standing committees.
The committees are:
Standards Committee
This purpose of this committee is to investigate
educational problems unique to distance education and training
fields, to survey the efficiency and effectiveness of instructional
methods and procedures and to recommend to the Commission policies,
standards and practices to govern the members of the Council.
This committee shall also seek to further the observance by the
members of the Council of ethical practices and business standards,
and investigate and make recommendations on the standards of ethical
conduct to the Commission.
Awards and Recognition Committee
The duties of this committee are to determine
the individual or individuals who shall receive awards or other
recognition of distinguished service to the distance education
and training fields. The Commission shall determine which awards
or other recognition of distinguished service shall be given;
however, the selection of the award recipients shall be the sole
responsibility of the committee.
Finance, Budget and Audit Committee
The duties of this committee are to study and
recommend methods of determining equitable dues and fees. The
committee shall also have the responsibility of preparing an annual
budget for approval by the Commission and presentation to the
Council at the annual meeting.
Nominating Committee
The Chair of the Commission will appoint a
committee charged with nominating officers and replacement members
to the Accrediting Commission. Public members of the Commission
and the Commission's officers will be elected by the Commission
itself and Commissioners from DETC-accredited institutions will
be elected by members of the Council.
back
to top
DETC History
The Distance Education and Training Council: Over Eight
Decades of Service
Since 1926, the DETC (formerly National Home
Study Council) has evolved continuously as a highly respected
public service organization dedicated to identifying quality distance
learning institutions. Over 135 million Americans have enrolled
in DETC institutions since 1890.
Today, DETC is comprised of over 100 distance
education institutions located in 21 states and 7 countries. DETC
institutions include non-profit institutions, trade associations,
for profit companies, colleges and universities, and military
organizations.
The range of institutions in the DETC makes
it unique. There are universities owned by national governments,
schools dedicated to offering tuition-free programs for the blind
and for parents of deaf children, church-owned schools of theology,
and schools teaching in Spanish and even a university in Japan
that offers degrees in translation.
DETC accredits some of the very largest educational
institutions in the world, including the military distance learning
institutes operated by the Air Force, Army and Marine Corps. Since
World War II, millions of veterans have studied with DETC institutions
earning degrees and job-enhancing skills as they prepared to re-enter
the workforce.
Within DETC's ranks are two century-old distance
high schools, Griggs International Academy and Penn Foster High
School, some of the world's largest education institutions (in terms of students enrolled), a school that teaches
the blind using Braille and tapes, a university owned by a consortia
of 19 state governors, the Western Governors University, and an
association of jewelers that sends diamonds to its distance students
to practice their appraisal skills. DETC also accredits two household
name government-owned universities in Australia: Deakin University
and the University of
Southern Queensland. There are DETC institutions operating all
along the Pacific Rim, from Singapore to Japan.
One DETC member, the International Correspondence
Schools (now called Penn Foster Career Schools) donated its curricula
to the U.S. Marine Corps in 1920 to help in the launching the
Marine Corps Institute in Washington, DC. For years the MCI diplomas
were co-signed by the President of ICS and the Commandant of the
Marine Corps. In 1926, ICS repeated its gesture and donated its
curricula to the Coast Guard Institute.
Over 4 million students are enrolled in DETC
institutions, and over 500 fields of study are offered, ranging
from accounting to yacht design. DETC institutions offer instruction
at the Kindergarten through the Professional Doctoral Degree level
(e.g., Doctor of Business Administration and the Doctor of Education.)
Famous alumni of DETC institutions include
industrialist Walter Chrysler, Senators Barry Goldwater and Stuart
Symington, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, WWI war hero Captain
Eddie Rickenbacker, cartoonist Charles Schultz, South African
President Nelson Mandella, playwright Clifford Odetts, and millions
of other men, women and children. Dozens of entertainers, ice
skating stars and tennis professionals earned their high school
diplomas from DETC institutions.
DETC has enjoyed the official recognition of
the U.S. Secretary of Education since 1959, and since 1975, DETC
has been recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation
or its predecessor organizations.
The foundation of all modern distance education
theory and practice was correspondence instruction, which started
in this country in the 1870s. Correspondence study has evolved
over the decades and pioneered or perfected many instructional
methods and tactics now taken for granted, including convenient,
at home learning anytime or anyplace, self-paced scheduling, self-testing
in textbooks, and “action learning” in the workplace,
where curricula coverage matches up with job duties and hands
on applications.
DETC institutions have been cutting edge in
their visionary approach, were offering at home instruction in
law in 1908, radio electronics in 1914, in television
electronics in 1935, robotics in 1975 and microcomputer repair
in 1976. The first use of online learning in DETC was 1986, when
the Gemological Institute of America created its GIA NET that
combined telephone links and personal computers.
Prior to WWII, the majority of CPAs in many American states
learned their craft from DETC accounting schools. A large number
of America’s yacht designers are alumni of DETC’s
Westlawn Institute of Marine Technology.
Today, DETC institutions make use of a diverse
variety of media to provide up to date and performance-based learning,
including the Internet and its entire array of tools.
As the 21st century gets underway, we see that
distance education growing at a record rate in terms of new providers,
burgeoning student enrollments, global audiences, and near limitless
potential for bringing the finest learning and finest faculty
right to every student’s home or office. No longer place
bound or schedule bound, learners are going “back to school”
again by the millions, and DETC institutions are on the leading
edge of this education evolution.
A free history of DETC
is available by contacting Karen Black at Karen@detc.org
back to top
|