Seoul Accord

The Seoul Accord is an international accreditation agreement for professional computing and information technology academic degrees, between the bodies responsible for accreditation in its signatory countries. Established in 2008, the signatories as of 2016 are Australia, Canada, Taiwan (as Chinese Taipei), Hong Kong China, Japan, Korea, the United Kingdom and the United States. Provisional signatories include Ireland, New Zealand, Mexico and Philippines.[1]

This agreement mutually recognizes tertiary level computing and IT qualifications between the signatory agencies. Graduates of accredited programs in any of the signatory countries are recognized by the other signatory countries as having met the academic requirements as IT professionals.

Scope

The Seoul Accord covers tertiary undergraduate computing degrees. Engineering and Engineering Technology programs are not covered by the Seoul accord, although some Software engineering programs have dual accreditation with the Washington Accord.

Signatories

The following are the signatory accreditation bodies of the Seoul Accord, their respective countries and territories, and years of admission:[1]

The following are Provisional Signatories of the Seoul Accord, along with their respective countries and territories and years of admission:


gollark: It probably stands for "Windows packet capture", considering.
gollark: It might be related to your apparent virus infection. Probably something is trying to meddle with network traffic.
gollark: Why do you ask?
gollark: > For many years, WinPcap has been recognized as the industry-standard tool for link-layer network access in Windows environments, allowing applications to capture and transmit network packets bypassing the protocol stack, and including kernel-level packet filtering, a network statistics engine and support for remote packet capture.
gollark: https://www.winpcap.org/

See also

References

  1. "Seoul Accord". Seoul Accord Secretariat. Seoul Accord Secretariat. Retrieved 6 April 2016.
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