Accreditation is a quality assurance process that evaluates whether a college or university meets recognized academic and administrative standards. For education programs, understanding accreditation helps you assess program credibility and avoid schools that may limit future academic or financial options.

This page explains how accreditation applies to education degrees and what to verify before enrolling.

Quick Answers

Why is accreditation important for education programs?

Accreditation helps confirm that a college or university meets recognized academic and administrative standards. It can affect transfer credits and whether certain types of financial aid are available.

What is the difference between institutional and programmatic accreditation?

Institutional accreditation applies to the entire college or university and is the baseline you should verify. Programmatic accreditation applies to a specific program and is optional for many fields.

Are online education programs accredited?

Online programs should hold the same institutional accreditation as campus-based programs. Delivery format does not change the need for recognized institutional accreditation.

Do I need programmatic accreditation?

Most students do not need programmatic accreditation. Institutional accreditation is the primary requirement to verify.

How do I verify a school’s accreditation?

Check the school’s website for accreditation disclosures and confirm the accrediting body through recognized directories. Look for clear language stating current accreditation, not pending or provisional claims.

At a Glance

  • Institutional accreditation: Baseline quality check for the entire school
  • Programmatic accreditation: Optional, field-specific review (e.g., CAEP for education)
  • Online programs: Should hold same accreditation as campus programs
  • Why it matters: Affects credit transfer, financial aid, and licensure eligibility
  • How to verify: Check school disclosures and accreditor directories

For an overview of degree formats and program options, start with the Education Program Guide.

For teaching programs, accreditation is especially important because state licensure requirements often specify that candidates must graduate from an accredited institution. Some states require CAEP-accredited (formerly NCATE/TEAC) programs for teacher certification. Verify your state’s requirements before enrolling.

Institutional accreditation explained

Institutional accreditation applies to the entire college or university. This is the primary form of accreditation students should verify.

What institutional accreditation typically reviews

Institutional accreditation typically reviews:

  • Academic governance and oversight
  • Faculty qualifications and hiring standards
  • Curriculum review processes
  • Student services and academic support
  • Financial stability and administrative operations

Why institutional accreditation matters

If a school lacks recognized institutional accreditation, credits earned there may not transfer and financial aid eligibility may be limited.

To understand how accreditation fits into broader program evaluation, compare it alongside admissions requirements and Education Curriculum.

Programmatic accreditation

Some education programs also hold programmatic accreditation specific to the field. This type of accreditation is optional and not required for most degrees.

What programmatic accreditation may evaluate

Programmatic accreditation may evaluate:

  • Depth and structure of coursework
  • Faculty experience and credentials
  • Learning outcomes and assessment methods
  • Continuous improvement processes

Education-specific programmatic accreditation

The Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (CAEP) is the primary programmatic accreditor for teacher preparation programs. Some states require CAEP accreditation for licensure eligibility.

Online and accelerated programs

Accreditation standards apply equally to online, accelerated, and campus-based programs. Delivery format does not change the requirement for recognized institutional accreditation.

What to confirm for different formats

When comparing formats, confirm that:

  • Online programs are accredited under the same institution as campus programs
  • Accelerated formats do not waive core academic requirements
  • Credits earned online appear the same on transcripts

Related format pages:

How accreditation affects transfer credits

Accreditation plays a major role in whether credits transfer between institutions. Schools often accept transfer credits only from institutions with recognized accreditation.