Accreditation Council on Optometric Education Appoints Stephanie Puljak as Director
The Accreditation Council on Optometric Education (ACOE) welcomes Stephanie Puljak as the Director of ACOE. Following a thorough nationwide search, Puljak will take the staff leadership role of ACOE – the only accrediting body for professional optometric degree programs, optometric residency programs and optometric technician programs in the U.S. and Canada – during a period of tremendous change in health care and historic advancement for optometry and optometric education. She will help ACOE, composed of 11 members, serve the public and the profession of optometry by establishing, maintaining and applying standards to ensure the academic quality and continuous improvement of optometric education that reflect the contemporary practice of optometry.
Puljak succeeds Joyce Urbeck, who retired from the American Optometric Association (AOA) and specifically ACOE after a combined 46 years of service (37 with ACOE).
Prior to Stephanie’s role as Director of ACOE, she demonstrated leadership experience in operations, process improvement and compliance, honed and tested especially during her work for Magellan Health and Express Scripts and her educational pursuits.
“Stephanie’s background is a natural fit for the ACOE. We look forward to the expertise and skills that she brings to furthering the mission of the ACOE,” said Stephanie S. Messner, OD, ACOE Chair.
Both the U.S. Department of Education and the Council on Higher Education Accreditation recognize the ACOE as a reliable authority concerning the quality of education of the programs the Council accredits. ACOE accreditation means the programs that have attained accredited status:
Professional Optometric Degree programs are courses of study leading to a doctor of optometry (OD) degree.
Optometric Residency programs of postdoctoral optometry clinical education are designed to advance the optometric graduate's preparation for patient care services beyond entry-level practice.
Optometric Technician programs prepare students to work as optometric technicians with a working knowledge and an understanding of the procedures within the current scope of optometric practice. These programs are a minimum of one academic year.