(08-29-2025, 04:46 PM)JC39 Wrote: I’ve been looking into the same thing and I agree with your observation that the UNISEB marketing still shows the diploma mockups with ISEB mentioned, even though the final award should be from Universidad Isabel I as a Título Propio. From what I’ve seen so far, the end result hasn’t really changed much compared to the old ENEB/ISEB + Ui1 setup: you’d still get the Ui1 propio diploma and a certificate from the training provider.I don't think there will be a new mockup with the diploma being solely awarded by UI1. My guess is that what you see is what you get, and that these diplomas are technically issued by UI1 in that they're issued by "UNISEB | UI1" or "ISEB and UI1" but not standalone by UI1. But at the same time the text at the bottom of the "mockups" (which, again, I think are probably representative of the actual diploma) says that ISEB or UNISEB are the issuers of the title, and that UI1 is the certifier. What the difference is in Spanish regulation or law, I don't know. Someone will just have to guinea-pig it and see if the convalidated degree is more recognised than the normal ENEB one by foreign education evaluators.
That’s why I don’t really see the added value of “UNISEB” if it’s only branding the MBA and not expanding to the other degrees. Unless it’s been clarified that evaluators in the U.S. (ECE, IEE, etc.) will recognize the Ui1 award differently under the UNISEB label, it feels like the outcome is the same, it comes down to how the Título Propio is interpreted.
Personally, if a Título Propio ends up transferring as RA master’s equivalent, then it could be worth it. But if not, going the evaluation route with ECE/IEE for RA bachelor’s or grad-level credits seems like the safer bet. I’m still waiting on my evaluation results and hoping for a favorable outcome, but right now I think sticking with a straight evaluator-recognized pathway makes the most sense.
(08-31-2025, 01:55 AM)Robson Wrote:ISEB has been running their programs for a while now. This is the "UI1 diploma" which they refer to, which appears to be the same as the ENEB "diploma", unless someone can correct my Spanish.(08-29-2025, 04:46 PM)JC39 Wrote: I’ve been looking into the same thing and I agree with your observation that the UNISEB marketing still shows the diploma mockups with ISEB mentioned, even though the final award should be from Universidad Isabel I as a Título Propio. From what I’ve seen so far, the end result hasn’t really changed much compared to the old ENEB/ISEB + Ui1 setup: you’d still get the Ui1 propio diploma and a certificate from the training provider.I don't think there will be a new mockup with the diploma being solely awarded by UI1. My guess is that what you see is what you get, and that these diplomas are technically issued by UI1 in that they're issued by "UNISEB | UI1" or "ISEB and UI1" but not standalone by UI1. But at the same time the text at the bottom of the "mockups" (which, again, I think are probably representative of the actual diploma) says that ISEB or UNISEB are the issuers of the title, and that UI1 is the certifier. What the difference is in Spanish regulation or law, I don't know. Someone will just have to guinea-pig it and see if the convalidated degree is more recognised than the normal ENEB one by foreign education evaluators.
That’s why I don’t really see the added value of “UNISEB” if it’s only branding the MBA and not expanding to the other degrees. Unless it’s been clarified that evaluators in the U.S. (ECE, IEE, etc.) will recognize the Ui1 award differently under the UNISEB label, it feels like the outcome is the same, it comes down to how the Título Propio is interpreted.
Personally, if a Título Propio ends up transferring as RA master’s equivalent, then it could be worth it. But if not, going the evaluation route with ECE/IEE for RA bachelor’s or grad-level credits seems like the safer bet. I’m still waiting on my evaluation results and hoping for a favorable outcome, but right now I think sticking with a straight evaluator-recognized pathway makes the most sense.


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