08-28-2025, 10:58 AM
(08-28-2025, 10:22 AM)PearsonBTEC7Qualifi45 Wrote: I am no expert on Spain's Education Law, but here's what comes up:
"Spanish law prohibits the existence of "unaccredited" universities; any institution offering university-level education must comply with the Organic Law of the University System (LOSU) or be dissolved. This requires institutions to meet quality standards and have their degrees recognized by the national authorities, including the Ministry of Universities and the National Agency for Quality Assessment and Accreditation (ANECA), to ensure they are not just "academies" or private institutions that aren't universities"
https://www.google.com/search?q=spanish+...e&ie=UTF-8
My point is that ENEB is not a university, thus it is not an unaccredited university. ENEB is a registered training center, it would fall under the definition of an "academy" thus it does not confer degrees of any kind. An academy is also called a school, but a school cannot confer a degree unless it is a university.
From what I can tell, ENEB does not issue any degrees, they are training certificates, Ui1 then certifies the completed training with ECTS and issues a Ui1 Diploma as an indirect Titulo Propio.
I'm not sure I would trust Google AI on that one. I did read a similar thing from it the other day, but I don't recall the term "unaccredited" or its Spanish equivalent being used in the Spanish law for this but I may just not be remembering. I mean, I have read the law on this a bunch of times in the past from an official source, I just can't remember what it all said. If I find it, I'll post it word for word for clarity.


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