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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The School
of Music at The University of Alabama has received reaccreditation
by the National Association of Schools of Music.
According to their Action Report, the National Association of
Schools of Music’s Commission on Accreditation recently voted
to continue the UA music degree and program listings in good standing
through the 2012-2013 academic year.
“UA has one of the finest music schools in the Southeast
and has a long and strong reputation,” said Dr. Robert F.
Olin, dean of UA’s College of Arts and Sciences. “I
am delighted that the accrediting commission recognizes that quality.”
“A ten year reaccreditation demonstrates that UA has an
excellent School of Music,” said Dr. Charles G. Snead, director
of the School of Music. “We offer programs that have been
carefully evaluated and are in-line with national standards.
“Accreditation is important when it comes to meeting the
University’s goal of growing student enrollment. Undergraduate
and graduate students are interested in a fully accredited comprehensive
school in line with other National Association of Schools of Music
approved programs. This provides them the assurance that they are
receiving a strong and competitive education. It is also an important
aspect of attracting and maintaining a quality faculty,” said
Snead.
The School of Music has been accredited since 1945, and Snead
has been with the University for 17 years, yet reaccreditation
was the first major task he took on after being named director
of the School of Music in April 2004.
“A detailed reaccreditation response was in answer to a
very expansive on-site study that allowed us to analyze what we
were doing well and where we could become better,” said Snead. “The
study proved to be a valuable tool that we will use to give us
vision for the future.”
As a member of the National Association of Schools of Music, the
University is responsible for participating in all revisions and
additions to the standards as well as keeping its curricular programs
in music current with the association’s developing standards.
The School of Music serves 300 students who are majoring in music
and has 35 full-time faculty members. Graduate and undergraduate
programs are offered in performance, education, composition, theory,
history, therapy and jazz studies.
The School of Music occupies the Frank Moody Music Building, which
opened in 1987 and provides a spacious and beautiful environment
in which to study and perform. The centerpiece of the building
is the 1,000-seat Concert Hall with its Holtkamp organ, standing
three stories high with four manuals, 65 stops, and more than 5,000
pipes. The Moody Music Building is recognized as one of the state's
most important cultural facilities.
The College of Arts and Sciences is
the University’s largest division and the largest public
liberal arts college in the state with 6,600 students and 360 faculty.
Students from the college have won numerous national awards including
Rhodes Scholarships, Goldwater Scholarships, and memberships on
the “USA Today” Academic All American Team.
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