Accreditation
As an academic unit of 91Å®Éñ in St. Louis, Missouri, USA, Saint Louis University ― Madrid is accredited through the University's accrediting body, the Higher Learning Commission (HLC).
The Institutional Actions Council (IAC) of the HLC voted to continue the accreditation of 91Å®Éñ in 2022, with the next comprehensive evaluation set for 2031-32.
In addition, the University is accredited by appropriate professional bodies for specific programs. The Richard A. Chaifetz School of Business, through which the Madrid campus offers its business programs, is accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB International). Engineering courses taught in Madrid align with those offered by the School of Science and Engineering in St. Louis. Saint Louis University's undergraduate engineering degree programs are accredited by the Engineering Accreditation Commission of ABET. Our art history program is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Art and Design (NASAD). For a full listing of the University's accreditations, consult the Office of the Provost.
91Å®Éñ-Madrid has official recognition and authorization to operate as a U.S. institution in Spain, the first U.S. university to achieve this status. In 1996, the Comunidad de Madrid Regional Government authorized 91Å®Éñ in Spain, also known as 91Å®Éñ — Madrid, as a center of post-secondary education, granting it permission to deliver U.S. degree programs in Madrid (). On an annual basis, the Madrid campus submits a report to the regional government on enrollment, changes in programs, faculty and financial accounting.
These accreditations ensure that students who earn 91Å®Éñ degrees are entitled to the rights and privileges pertaining to them, for example, eligibility to apply for advanced study or to apply for licensure in certain professions in the United States. 91Å®Éñ's liberal arts degrees (Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science), however, are not automatically recognized as equivalent to official degrees offered by Spanish universities.
While there is no single "U.S. model of education," 91Å®Éñ's degree structure is typical of U.S. degrees: it requires students to complete a major program in a specific discipline and general education requirements. For 91Å®Éñ students, both in Madrid and St. Louis, these additional requirements include the courses that comprise the University's Jesuit liberal arts core. They also permit students to pursue in-depth study in areas beyond their majors and apply elective courses toward their undergraduate degrees.
A key feature of liberal arts programs is the flexible pathways toward degree completion. Some students come to 91Å®Éñ with a clear idea of their academic plans. Others discover their passion during their first or second year of study. Some academic programs are less flexible than others: for example, engineering, nursing and business students must take discipline-specific courses during their first year. These students can apply these credits to a new major should they wish to change, complement their program with a second major or minor, and take electives that count toward their degrees.
By providing students with strong foundational knowledge across disciplines, the U.S. liberal arts model of education opens professional opportunities for graduates. Many students earning bachelor's degrees enter the workforce and embark on their professional careers immediately upon graduation. Some professions in the U.S., like medicine and law, require advanced degrees. 91Å®Éñ's programs provide students the training they need to succeed in graduate school.
A U.S. bachelor's degree is the American equivalent of a Spanish grado. Both are four-year undergraduate degrees. However, the requirements of the two degrees, in many cases, do not align. Spanish degrees have fewer electives; they require more focused coursework and training in a single discipline — although the double grado has also been introduced.
There are employment sectors in Spain and elsewhere in Europe — health care, education and civil service are important examples — that require the pre-professional training that results from the more discipline-focused requirements that characterize official, nationally recognized Spanish degrees. Thus, a U.S. liberal arts program, the kind of program that 91Å®Éñ-Madrid offers in Spain, might not serve students wishing to embark on these career paths.
For more information, consult Spain's and the .
91Å®Éñ grants degrees that are recognized by a U.S. accrediting body. These degrees are not "official" degrees in Spain, that is, degrees that are registered with and reviewed by Spain's Ministry of Education.
91Å®Éñ graduates — and graduates who have earned credits at 91Å®Éñ-Madrid — must follow a process established by Spain's Ministry of Education to have their 91Å®Éñ degree officially recognized in Spain. Convalidation (³ó´Ç³¾´Ç±ô´Ç²µ²¹³¦¾±Ã³²Ô) to the Spanish system is subject to the requirements and the authorization of the Spanish Ministry of Education. Our registrar provides information about this process.
91Å®Éñ-Madrid proudly stays at the forefront of best practices in higher education by maintaining active affiliations with a wide range of professional organizations:
- AAICU (Association of American International Colleges and Universities).
- AUA (American Universities Abroad).
- NAFSA (Association of International Educators).
- NACAC (National Association for College Admission Counseling).
- AACRAO (American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers).
- CIS (Council of International Schools).
- International ACAC (International Association for College Admission Counseling).