The FCAA is delivered as an asynchronous LMS-based programme, allowing flexible, self-paced learning. The course begins with an introduction to Quality Assurance in Health Professions Education, focusing on its definition, importance, and core principles such as relevance, efficiency, effectiveness, and equity. Learners are introduced to the fundamental components assessed during accreditation—curriculum, faculty, infrastructure, and governance—and their salient features.
Subsequent modules provide an overview of standards and accreditation systems, including NAAC, NIRF, and NABET, with emphasis on alignment to national priorities and continuous improvement. Participants learn to develop QA policies and institutional frameworks, including feedback systems, audits, and accountability mechanisms.
Dedicated modules focus on quality indicators and metrics, guiding learners in defining KPIs, using institutional data meaningfully, and linking evidence to improvement strategies. The course also emphasises faculty development and peer review as core quality assurance mechanisms, highlighting their role in teaching excellence, research engagement, and professional growth.
The programme further addresses student feedback and stakeholder engagement, demonstrating how inputs from learners, alumni, employers, and partners inform institutional quality. Advanced modules focus on action planning and Continuous Quality Improvement, enabling participants to translate accreditation feedback into structured, measurable, and sustainable improvement initiatives. Exposure to quality tools such as SARs, benchmarking, competency-based assessment, OSCEs, 360-degree feedback, and Six Sigma strengthens participants’ practical readiness for accreditation-related roles.