(1) This procedure outlines the requirements for the accreditation, re-accreditation, amendments and discontinuation of Higher Education (HE) coursework award courses, enabling programs and units. (2) As a self-accrediting higher education provider CDU must ensure that the development, approval, delivery and discontinuance of all new and amended HE courses and units comply with professional accrediting and disciplinary bodies and the following regulations as set out in the Educational Quality and Excellence Framework Policy: (3) All HE courses and units must align to the Units and Courses Policy. (4) The HE course accreditation and re-accreditation process runs on a 7-year cycle, whereby each course is allocated a review date for re-accreditation. In some instances, a HE course may be subjected to an earlier review to meet professional registration or other requirements. (5) This procedure outlines the process to approve, accredit, reaccredit and amend HE courses and units to support requirements as set out in the Units and Courses Policy. (6) This procedure outlines the procedures, approval workflows and delegations across a common curriculum lifecycle of product prioritisation, planning, design and review that are aligned to academic governance. (7) The procedure applies to the accreditation of all HE coursework courses and unit accreditation, re-accreditation, amendments and discontinuation. (8) The procedure does not apply to the approval of Higher Degrees by Research, VET courses, non-award short courses and micro-credentials. (9) The first phase of the curriculum lifecycle is Product Prioritisation where the Vice-Chancellor decides as to the strategic fit and financial viability of a proposed product. (10) Prior to HE course accreditation for new, adapted and re-accredited products, a Business Case must be prepared by the Faculty Pro Vice-Chancellor. (11) Business cases for HE product prioritisation are categorised as: (12) The business case must provide adequate information to decide whether the product should be added or retained in the University’s product portfolio, including: (13) The next stage of the procedure, curriculum planning, cannot commence until the Business Case is submitted by the Faculty Pro Vice-Chancellor to the Vice-Chancellor and approved. (14) The second phase of the curriculum lifecycle is Course Planning where the Faculty Pro Vice-Chancellor approves the overarching course details. (15) Once a new, adapted or re-accredited product has been prioritised and approved for curriculum development by the Vice-Chancellor, the (16) All HE course plans must include detailed information regarding: (17) The next stage of this procedure, curriculum design, cannot commence until the Faculty Pro Vice-Chancellor approves the HE course plan in the CMS workflows. (18) The third phase of the curriculum lifecycle is Course and Unit Design where Academic Programs Committee conducts a quality review and ensures compliance with the academic requirements of the University and the legislation as prescribed in clause 2. (19) Once a HE course plan is approved by the Faculty Pro Vice-Chancellor, the (20) All HE course designs must include detailed information regarding: (21) All HE unit designs must include detailed information regarding: (22) Where new units are proposed as core or specialist electives in a HE course they must be submitted by the (23) Where a HE course is shared by two (24) Once the FLTC approves the HE course and new unit/s design in the CMS, it must be reviewed and approved by the Academic Programs Committee and reported to Academic Board. (25) Once Academic Programs Committee approves a HE course and/or unit it is accredited. (26) Once Academic Programs Committee approves a new HE course it declares the Award. (27) The fourth phase of the curriculum lifecycle is Course Review where every HE course must be subjected to 2 levels of course review: (28) (29) Annual or Major Course Reviews may result in amendments, revision, suspension and/or discontinuation of HE courses. (30) Minor and major amendments must consider and minimise the potential impact on students and across courses. (31) A minor amendment to a unit involves amendments that do not involve substantial change such as: (32) A minor amendment to a course involves amendments within a course that do not involve substantial change such as: (33) Minor amendments to a course or unit are submitted through the CMS and approved by the Faculty Pro Vice-Chancellor. (34) A major amendment to any unit includes: (35) Major amendments to units are submitted through the CMS and approved by the FLTC, and approved by the Chair Academic Programs Committee. (36) Major amendments to units should not be made after the annual publication of the next academic year’s units in October. Any amendments after 1 October may only be made with the full, documented consent of any enrolled students and in accordance with the approval process outlined above. (37) A major amendment to a course involves amendments that involve a significant change within a course such as: (38) Major amendments to courses are submitted through the CMS and approved by the FLTC, followed by Academic Programs Committee approval. (39) Major amendments to courses should not be made after the annual publication of courses in August. The Academic Programs Committee may approve course structure amendments made after August and before enrolments opening on a case-by-case basis. (40) Where numerous amendments to a HE course are proposed the Chair Academic Programs Committee will determine if the changes are so significant that the Faculty Pro Vice-Chancellor will submit of a business case for re-accreditation as detailed in Product Prioritisation of this procedure. (41) Proposals for course discontinuation are submitted through the CMS and approved by the Faculty Pro Vice-Chancellor, followed by an Academic Programs Committee and Vice-Chancellor approval. However, the Vice-Chancellor may initiate and approve course discontinuation without the approval of the Faculty Pro Vice-Chancellor. Vice-Chancellor approval is not required for course discontinuation as an outcome of the re-accreditation cycle. (42) Non-compliance with Governance Documents is considered a breach of the Code of Conduct – Staff or the Code of Conduct – Students, as applicable, and is treated seriously by the University. Reports of concerns about non-compliance will be managed in accordance with the applicable disciplinary procedures outlined in the Charles Darwin University and Union Enterprise Agreement 2022 and the Code of Conduct – Students. (43) Complaints may be raised in accordance with the Code of Conduct – Staff and Code of Conduct - Students. (44) All staff members have an individual responsibility to raise any suspicion, allegation or report of fraud or corruption in accordance with the Fraud and Corruption Control Policy and Whistleblower Reporting (Improper Conduct) Procedure.Higher Education Course Accreditation Procedure
Section 1 - Preamble
Section 2 - Purpose
Section 3 - Scope
Section 4 - Procedure
HE Product Prioritisation
HE Course Planning
HE Course and Unit Design
Course Review
Section 5 - Non-Compliance
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