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ALISON is an Irish online education platform for higher education that provides certificate courses and accredited diploma courses. [5] [6] It was founded on 21 April 2007 in Galway, Ireland, by Irish social entrepreneur Mike Feerick. [7] As of July 2022, Alison has 4,000 courses, 25 million learners worldwide, and 4.5 million graduates. [2] [3]
The Great Courses: Better Living, Economics & Finance, Fine Arts, High School, History, Literature & Language, Mathematics, Music, Philosophy & Intellectual History, Professional, Religion, Science, College level Paid English The Teaching Company Commercial as either a purchase per course or a streaming subscription for multiple courses 1990 US
A notable example of this last type is UNESCO, which does not have authority to recognize or accredit higher education institutions or agencies. [7] Nonetheless, because diploma mills have claimed false UNESCO accreditation, UNESCO itself has published warnings against education organizations that claim UNESCO recognition or affiliation.
There are professional education programs standing outside the higher education system, i.e. MBA, LLM, which are not considered as higher education programs. The schools and institutions providing them may be umbrellaed by some private organizations, e.g. CAMBAS (Czech Association of MBA Schools). [14]
In Albania, the accreditation authority/national recognition body is the ASCAL – Quality Assurance Agency in Higher Education (Albanian: Agjencia e Sigurimit të Cilësisë në Arsimin e Lartë) which was established by Order of CM no. 171, dated 27.09.2010, "On approval of structure of Public Accreditation Agency on Higher Education".
The best and worst U.S. states for finding a good job in 2024 Ample job opportunities, low unemployment and reasonable commute times make this the top U.S. state for job seekers, analysis finds ...
Alison received an Honourable Mention Award in information and communications technology at the UNESCO King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa Prize in Paris in 2010. [26]In 2012, Feerick received an Arthur Guinness Fund award for Social Entrepreneurship for the work undertaken with organising the Irish diaspora through the Ireland Reaching Out programme he founded in 2009.
Within American higher education, regional bodies were considered more prestigious. (The regional bodies were older, and included the most well established institutions.) [ 5 ] In February 2020, the Department of Education eliminated the distinction between regional and national accrediting agencies, creating one unified set of institutional ...