New Certificate Program Trains in Online Instructional Design

The Online Learning Consortium (OLC) is working with instructional design experts from the State University of New York to help people in higher education hone their skills in instructional design for online courses.

The new "Instructional Designer Certificate Program," which encompasses four online courses, will be taught by members of the staff at the Open SUNY Center for Online Teaching Excellence (COTE). Open SUNY is a cross-collaboration project to create services that support faculty from all of SUNY's campuses. COTE is dedicated to helping educators and others in SUNY bolster their online instructional practices. OLC is an organization that focuses on delivering professional development related to online teaching.

The new certificate program officially kicks off in January 2017. However, enrollees of the $1,499 program may choose to take the courses in any order over one year; each class will be offered twice during the coming year. They may also sign up for individual courses at $400 apiece and extend the timeline to two years if they wish to earn a certificate. Each course lasts four weeks, and the OLC recommends that participants have at least a year of experience in supporting online course design and development in an instructional design capacity, whether as an instructional designer, librarian or faculty member.

The four subjects to be explored are:

  • Helping faculty with new course development;
  • Creating useful resources for faculty;
  • Collaborating, researching and networking; and
  • Course quality review using Open SUNY's own Course Quality Review (OSCQR) rubric and process.

A webinar Dec. 14 at 2 p.m. Eastern will provide more details about the certificate program.

In the future, the OLC will work with Open SUNY on an open educational resources workshop, also to be delivered in 2017.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • geometric pattern features abstract icons of a dollar sign, graduation cap, and document

    Maricopa Community Colleges Adopts Platform to Combat Student Application Fraud

    In an effort to secure its admissions and financial processes, Maricopa Community Colleges has partnered with A.M. Simpkins and Associates (AMSA) to implement the company's S.A.F.E (Student Application Fraudulent Examination) across the district's 10 institutions.

  • stylized figures, resumes, a graduation cap, and a laptop interconnected with geometric shapes

    OpenAI to Launch AI-Powered Jobs Platform

    OpenAI announced it will launch an AI-powered hiring platform by mid-2026, directly competing with LinkedIn and Indeed in the professional networking and recruitment space. The company announced the initiative alongside an expanded certification program designed to verify AI skills for job seekers.

  • Abstract AI circuit board pattern

    New Nonprofit to Work Toward Safer, Truthful AI

    Turing Award-winning AI researcher Yoshua Bengio has launched LawZero, a new nonprofit aimed at developing AI systems that prioritize safety and truthfulness over autonomy.

  • hooded figure types on a laptop, with abstract manifesto-like posters taped to the wall behind them

    Hacktivism Is a Growing Threat to Higher Education

    In recent years, colleges and universities have faced an evolving array of cybersecurity challenges. But one threat is showing signs of becoming both more frequent and more politically charged: hacktivism.