Reflections on Obtaining AICE Endorsed Membership

A year ago, our organization became an Endorsed Member of the Association of International Credential Evaluators (AICE). As we reach this anniversary, we have been reflecting on what the AICE application experience meant to our team and how it has refined our thinking about professional standards in credential evaluation.

Alianza Academic Evaluators (formerly Arizona International Credential Evaluators) has long been committed to maintaining high standards and fostering a culture of continuous improvement. Throughout our history, our team has taken seriously the responsibility of providing credential evaluations that are accurate, ethical, and grounded in research. Because credential evaluations often inform decisions related to admission, professional licensure, immigration, and employment, clarity and integrity in the evaluation process are essential, not only for the individuals we serve but also for the institutions, employers, and government agencies that rely on well-supported evaluation conclusions. Pursuing AICE Endorsed Membership was a natural extension of these values and an opportunity to further align our work with the profession’s highest standards.

In January 2026, our organization rebranded as Alianza Academic Evaluations. While our name has evolved, our mission remains the same: to provide rigorous, research-based credential evaluations that help internationally educated individuals translate their academic achievements into opportunities in the United States. While obtaining Endorsed Membership represents an important milestone, the self-study experience leading up to it proved equally valuable. The application process deepened our understanding of the profession and strengthened our identity as an organization committed to integrity, learning, and service.

The Value of Self-Study

The AICE application process spans multiple phases, each requiring a thoughtful review of internal practices—from evaluator qualifications and institutional affiliations to bibliographic citation, security protocols, and evaluation methodologies.

Rather than treat this as a compliance exercise, we embraced it as an opportunity for meaningful reflection.

Our evaluators spent weeks reviewing internal practices, standards, and training materials to ensure that our evaluation methods were both transparent and consistently applied. The process also prompted valuable conversations among our team about how we document decisions, interpret complex international credentials, and share institutional knowledge across evaluators.

We examined how our methodologies are documented and shared internally so that evaluation decisions remain consistent, research-based, and clearly supported. We reviewed policies governing evaluator qualifications, bibliographic citation, document security, and record retention to ensure our procedures reflect best practices across the profession. In a field where evaluation decisions influence educational access, professional licensure, and career opportunities, maintaining rigorous and well-documented methodologies is essential.

The self-study also encouraged us to reflect on how we support evaluator development, including opportunities for continuing education, regional specialization, and engagement with the broader credential evaluation community.

Finally, we revisited the research resources and comparative education materials our evaluators rely on daily, ensuring that our internal library continues to support accurate, well-documented evaluation decisions.

At its core, the process prompted us to ask a simple but essential question:

  • Are we doing everything we can to earn and maintain our clients’ and partners’ trust?

The review was rigorous, but it made us stronger. It confirmed areas where our practices were working well and highlighted opportunities to refine our documentation, strengthen our internal processes, and continue advancing our standards of professional excellence.

The self-study process ultimately strengthened not only our documentation and procedures, but also our shared understanding of the responsibility that credential evaluation carries.

AICE’s Role in the Field

Now more than ever, foreign credential evaluation plays a critical role in U.S. higher education, professional licensure, and immigration. As institutions and individuals navigate evolving regulatory environments and increasingly diverse educational pathways, consistency and trust in credential evaluations are essential.

AICE helps safeguard that trust by:

  • Maintaining national standards for comparative evaluation
  • Promoting dialogue among evaluation professionals
  • Responding to changes in international education systems
  • Supporting transparency, consistency, and ongoing professional education among its members

In doing so, AICE supports students, universities, licensing boards, government agencies, and employers alike. It fosters a professional community committed to maintaining rigorous and ethical evaluation practices.

Our Commitment Going Forward

A year later, we continue to examine our processes, resources, and standards. We continue to learn from the collective expertise of our AICE colleagues when complex questions arise. We are grateful to AICE and its Endorsed Members for the thoughtful and collaborative review process and for welcoming us into the Endorsed Member community. The opportunity to exchange ideas with experienced professionals in the field continues to deepen our understanding of the global education landscape and encourages us to approach our work with both rigor and curiosity. The experience strengthened our organization and reaffirmed the values that guide our work: accuracy, accountability, and access.

As educational systems around the word continue to change and evolve, the role of credential evaluation continues to be of vital importance. Our experience with the AICE self-study reinforced our belief that thoughtful, research-based evaluation is essential to building trust between educational systems and helping internationally educated individuals translate their academic achievements into meaningful opportunities with the institutions and employers they seek to join in the United States.

Learn more about AICE at https://www.aice-eval.org.

Learn more about Alianza Academic Evaluations (formerly Arizona International Credential Evaluators) at https://www.alianzaeval.com

 

 

Scroll to Top