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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Aug. 22, 2007) — Tennessee Tech University’s
EMS paramedic program recently received national accreditation from the
Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs.
CAAHEP’s board of directors and the Committee on Accreditation
of Educational Programs for the EMS Professions conducted a peer review
of the program and approved initial accreditation through 2010.
“This is a distinction that recognizes our program’s compliance
with the nationally established accreditation standards,” said Dennis
Parker, TTU’s program director.
“Our goal is to always offer the highest quality licensing program
possible, and national accreditation indicates that the quality of our
program is equivalent to that of the other nationally accredited programs,”
he said.
Between only 200 and 300 such programs across the country are nationally
accredited now.
It takes students seven months to earn their initial EMT licensure through
TTU’s non-credit program and 11 months to earn their paramedic licensure.
The program can accommodate a total of 25 students per year and typically
serves the entire Upper Cumberland area but attracts students from as
far away as Lincoln County and the Oak Ridge area, Parker said.
“The commission commends [TTU for its] commitment to continuous
quality improvement in education, as demonstrated by [its] participation
in program accreditation,” said William J. Horgan, president of
CAAHEP.
--Tracey Hackett
This information posted 29 August 2007
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