Develop an Advanced Certificate

Overview

Advanced Certificates are defined as a structured group of graduate-level courses that focus on a specific area of knowledge. As such, they are stand-alone programs that concentrate on particular skills needed in the workplace for career advancement, career change, continuing education requirements, or personal education enhancement.

An Advanced Certificate is defined as follows under the NYSED Regulations of the Commissioner of Education §50.1(j): “Certificate means a credential issued by an institution in recognition of the completion of a curriculum other than one leading to a degree.” 

NYSED requires that Advanced Certificates be designed as stand-alone programs for qualified applicants outside of the university. A collection of courses that existing students can take to enhance their skill-based competency in a focused area of study does NOT constitute an Advanced Certificate and will not be approved by NYSED.

An Advanced Certificate program could become a pathway to a related graduate degree program for students who wish to continue their education. Credits earned through a post-baccalaureate certificate (an Advanced Certificate) in which there is an approved master’s degree may, upon approval of the program and the graduate college, count towards a master’s degree.

See additional guidance from NYSED at this link: Certificate and Advanced Certificate Program Proposals and Eligibility for New York State Financial Aid.

Proposal Form

RIT does not have a proposal form for new Advanced Certificate programs. Instead, the new Advanced Certificate must be prepared using one of the following NYSED application forms as the RIT Proposal Form:

Note: The NYSED CEO/Designee Approval Form (that is referenced in General Academic Program application) will be completed by the Office of the Vice Provost.

The NYSED form requests a proposed HEGIS code for the new program. HEGIS codes are a classification system developed by the U.S. Department of Education to standardize the way academic programs are categorized. While HEGIS codes are assigned based on the major focus of the program’s content, all 5000-level HEGIS codes are generally reserved for associate-level programs. Review NYSED’s list of HEGIS codes.

Distance Education

If a major portion (i.e., 50% or more) of the program requirements can be completed through study delivered by distance education, a NYSED Distance Education application must be submitted along with the new program application. Learn more about this requirement.

Course Requirements

All credit-bearing courses in an Advanced Certificate program must be approved by the University and designated as applicable to one or more registered degree programs – either as part of the major or electives. This assures NYSED that the course is part of a regular curricular review process. NYSED’s New Certificate/Advanced Certificate form requires identification of the registered degree program title(s) to which the Advanced Certificate credits apply.

Faculty Requirements

NYSED provides the following faculty requirements for Advanced Certificate programs:

  • Faculty members teaching at the graduate level must hold earned doctorates or other terminal degrees in their specialty areas, except as noted below:
    • Faculty members teaching at the graduate level without an earned doctorate or other terminal degree have significant, widely recognized special competence in the field in which they teach.
      • This is demonstrated through national or international publications, research recognized in the field and other contributions to the advancement of knowledge, professional practice or quality of life. The burden of proof is on the institution to demonstrate the special competence of such individuals.

Minimum Credit Hours

NYSED does not stipulate a minimum number of credit hours for an Advanced Certificate. RIT Advanced Certificates typically consist of at least 12 semester credit hours but this should not be viewed as a requirement. The guiding principle is that proposers have flexibility to ensure that the Advanced Certificate’s learning objectives are met and that a student will have the requisite skills upon completion of the Advanced Certificate. If this can be accomplished in 9 credit hours, that is acceptable.

To be eligible for financial aid, New York State requires that students be enrolled in at least 12 credit hours of courses.

Required Approvals

  • Refer to the following guidance document to determine the required approvals: RIT Curricular Action Approval Process for Creating New Programs or Changing Existing Programs.
  • At least two weeks prior to scheduling a review with Graduate Council, send the proposal (and Distance Ed application if applicable) to the Office of the Vice Provost for review and comments. A Graduate Council review cannot be scheduled until this has occurred. Following Graduate Council approval, the proposed Advanced Certificate will go to Faculty Senate for approval.
  • After Faculty Senate approval has been secured, send the following items to the Office of the Vice Provost via email:
    • Completed, approved NYSED Application
    • If applicable, a completed, approved NYSED Distance Education Application
  • The Office of the Vice Provost will review the final proposal, obtain approval from the Provost, and submit the application to NYSED.

After NYSED Approval

The proposed program MAY NOT be advertised or admit students until a formal approval has been received from NYSED.

Once the new Advanced Certificate has been approved by NYSED, the following actions will occur:

  • The Office of the Vice Provost will work with the college and Enrollment Management to determine a first admit term and request a plan code from the Registrar’s Office.
  • The Office of the Vice Provost will send an official campus notification to the applicable campus departments, the applicable Dean and Associate Dean, and the Graduate Council Chair.
  • The new Advanced Certificate will be added to the graduate bulletin and RIT Programs of Study website during the annual bulletin process.

Refer to the following document for instructions regarding promotion of the new program: Marketing, Recruitment and Communication Guidelines for RIT’s New or Changed Academic Programs