sanantone,
The case for ENEB’s degree legitimacy in the U.S. could be made fairly easily. Let’s take the state of Texas, particularly the Texas Education Agency. https://tea.texas.gov/texas-educators/ce...n-services. The agency has a list of “Reviewed Foreign Credential Evaluator Providers.” Would you agree this would be a good list for seeking a credential evaluation in Texas, even though it’s primarily aimed at educators?
We have a forum member who had the ENEB degree evaluated (under general evaluation) as the equivalent of a regionally accredited Bachelor’s degree by one of the agencies listed by the Texas Education Agency, mainly ECE. You can browse the ENEB thread for full documentation. Regardless of what you might think of this judgement, it undermines the notion that ENEB’s independence and mere certification by Universidad Isabel I presents a major problem. ECE.org (A NACES member!) does not take this position. You could still say that it’s not a Master’s degree based on this evaluation (I can imagine a different judgement from other evaluators in the future). However, the case for using ENEB as a prime example of a fraudulent degree seems very suspect when you have a history of such evaluation by a NACES member and the fact that Spanish universities offer titulo propios (whether in cooperation or run on their own) as a legitimate option for students, even foreign students.
The case for ENEB’s degree legitimacy in the U.S. could be made fairly easily. Let’s take the state of Texas, particularly the Texas Education Agency. https://tea.texas.gov/texas-educators/ce...n-services. The agency has a list of “Reviewed Foreign Credential Evaluator Providers.” Would you agree this would be a good list for seeking a credential evaluation in Texas, even though it’s primarily aimed at educators?
We have a forum member who had the ENEB degree evaluated (under general evaluation) as the equivalent of a regionally accredited Bachelor’s degree by one of the agencies listed by the Texas Education Agency, mainly ECE. You can browse the ENEB thread for full documentation. Regardless of what you might think of this judgement, it undermines the notion that ENEB’s independence and mere certification by Universidad Isabel I presents a major problem. ECE.org (A NACES member!) does not take this position. You could still say that it’s not a Master’s degree based on this evaluation (I can imagine a different judgement from other evaluators in the future). However, the case for using ENEB as a prime example of a fraudulent degree seems very suspect when you have a history of such evaluation by a NACES member and the fact that Spanish universities offer titulo propios (whether in cooperation or run on their own) as a legitimate option for students, even foreign students.


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