NOON
What attributes are usde to rate cpu
USDE does not directly provide accreditation, it is not an accreditation agency. USDE monitors accreditation agencies, which provide accreditation to colleges/schools. So to answer your question I would say that actually no school and college is directly accredited with USDE.
phones
It stands for united states dollars
A table is a table when it is turned upside down it is simply a table in a seperately labeled strand of existence. Nothing can change the definition of an existing object....
Wind is mostly used for electristity and it can be usde to power generators and recharge some turbinds. wind is also used for energey. theres not many uses for wind other then to cool us down xD
Answer 1: Whether or not the school's "online" means nothing, for purposes of the answer you seek. The only thing that mattters is whether the school is accredited. And "accredited" means by an agency approved by the US Department of Education (USDE). No other kind of "accreditation" is actually real accreditation. Do not, then, be fooled!Whether it's an online school, or one with a physical campus over on Elm Street, whether or not it's accredited by a USDE-approved agency is all that matters.Do not fear an "online" school, as long as it's accredited by a USDE-approved agency. And if it's a high school, make sure the USDE-approved accreditor is of the "regional" type.
Thermometer is used to measure the amount of heat in objects.
Answer 1: If the college, or university, or tech/trade/career school, or military school, or seminary, or whatever it is appears in the online databases of either or both of the US Department of Education (USDE), and/or the USDE-sanctioned Council for Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA), then, yes, it's accredited. It matters not if it's and online or in-classroom school. If it's in at least one of either or both of the USDE and/or CHEA online databases, then it's accredited. Period.Conversely, if it's not in at least one of those two online databases, then beware, because it's almost certainly not accredited... no matter what it claims on its website. And, trust me, if it's a degree mill, it will lie and claim it's accredited, when it's not. It may even go so far as to create a fake accreditor, and even build a website for it, and then put itself on said website as one of the fake accreditor's "accredited" schools. BUT DO NOT BE FOOLED!Unless the school, whatever kind of school it is, is listed in either or both of the USDE and/or CHEA online databases, then it is not accredited. Period.If the school in question isn't listed in the first database, then do check the second, because there are a few accreditors what are approved by CHEA but not USDE, and vice versa. But if the school's in at least one of the two databases, then, yes, it's accredited.I've put the links to both the USDE and CHEA databases down in the "sources and related links" section of this web page, below.
US Dept. of Education does not directly provide accreditation to educational institutes; neither has it issued any kind of licenses or permits to schools and colleges. Accreditation is provided by the accreditation agencies that are recognized by the USDE and other official accreditation agencies and Hill University is not approved by any of the agencies recognized by the USDE.
well you go up to it and usde ur Pokemon