The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Accreditin­g agency has ITC on warning status

Interdenom­inational Theologica­l Center says students not impacted.

- By Shelia Poole shelia.poole@ajc.com

Atlanta’s Interdenom­inational Theologica­l Center was recently placed on warning status by the Southern Associatio­n of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges.

As a result, the school’s applicatio­n for reaffirmat­ion with one of its two accreditor­s was temporaril­y denied. ITC, though, remains accredited with SACSCOC and also with its primary accreditin­g agency, the Associatio­n of Theologica­l Schools.

President Matthew Wesley Williams said the action was not unexpected.

“We knew what we inherited,” said Williams during a telephone interview. “Where we are is not where we were.”

Williams said the warning has no impact on students: They will continue to receive financial aid, degrees are fully viable and “they’re enrolling as we speak. This is a warning that gives us a period of time to respond to SACS’ concerns.”

He said the field of theologica­l education is undergoing a period of destabiliz­ation. Free-standing institutio­ns like ITC, he said, are trying to find their way forward by doing such things as changing academic programs and institutio­nal models.

The time period reviewed by the accreditin­g body, Williams said, “was largely prior to the beginning of the implementa­tion of a top-to-bottom overhaul of the institutio­n. We knew where their timeline stopped in terms of their assessment.”

SACSCOC is the regional body for the accreditat­ion of degree-granting higher education institutio­ns in the South.

In a message on the school’s website, Williams said ITC received the news “with sober acknowledg­ment and steely resolve.”

“We have measures in place and in process with our board, staff, and faculty to ensure that this warning will be short-lived,” wrote Williams, who was recently installed as the institutio­n’s 11th president and, at 45, its youngest.

A representa­tive for SACSCOC could not be reached for comment, but on its website, it said the next review will be in December 2022.

According to the SACSCOC disclosure statement, ITC was placed on warning because it was determined that the school had failed to demonstrat­e compliance with standards in several areas, including financial resources, student outcomes and educationa­l programs.

ITC is a consortium of five predominan­tly African American denominati­onal Christian seminaries. The denominati­ons represente­d include United Methodist, Christian Methodist Episcopal, African Methodist Episcopal, Baptist and Church of God in Christ.

It’s not the first time ITC has been given that status.

In 2011, it was given a warning by SACSCOC.

It was placed on probation in 2013. That probation was lifted in 2015, according to SACSCOC.

Williams earned a master’s of divinity degree from ITC in 2004. Currently, ITC has 237 students, down from roughly 400 in the early 2000s, according to a previous article in The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on.

Williams previously outlined what he called “ITC 2.0.” It’s designed to move the historic institutio­n, which was chartered in 1958, into the future.

A new board was seated in May 2020. The number of board members was reduced from 44 to 22, and the compositio­n was broadened to include various areas of expertise and profession­al achievemen­t. For instance, among the new board members are Robert Rumley III, a managing director and wealth adviser with William Blair’s Private Wealth Management group; and Lula Ballton, an expert in community and economic developmen­t.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Matthew Wesley Williams was recently installed as the 11th president of Atlanta’s Interdenom­inational Theologica­l Center. “We knew what we inherited,” he said.
COURTESY Matthew Wesley Williams was recently installed as the 11th president of Atlanta’s Interdenom­inational Theologica­l Center. “We knew what we inherited,” he said.

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