Visit Modern Campus

Graduate Certificates Growing in Value for Working Adults

AUDIO| Graduate Certificates Growing in Value for Working Adults
Due to their cost and time to completion, graduate certificates may be better suited to the needs of today’s working adults than master’s degrees.

The following interview is with Wayne Smutz, dean of continuing education and UCLA Extension. Smutz has been involved with creating innovative approaches to graduate education throughout his career, first at Penn State University and now at UCLA. In this interview, Smutz discusses the issue of credentialing at the graduate level and shares his thoughts on the growing influence, and value, of graduate certificates both for employers and working adults.

1. What are the differences between graduate degrees and certificates?

Certificates tend to be shorter than master’s degrees. Usually we’re talking about certificates at the graduate level but there are undergraduate certificates as well. In any case, they tend to be shorter than a degree itself. It’s a shorter span of time, fewer courses and less money.

Sometimes, certificates are seen as stepping stones to a degree so that people have a sense of accomplishment having completed a body of work before they make a full commitment to a degree itself. That’s often the way they’ve been used in the past, and I think there are new ways they may be used in this new economy we’re starting to grow into.

2. From your perspective, which of the two is more valuable for today’s working adult?

I have begun to rethink my own perspective on this, having watched what’s going on with the economy, with the constant change in the technology and skills required — and faculty members here at UCLA have observed that in the future, people are going to have three or four careers over their lifetime. The base of knowledge changes so rapidly in different fields, and new jobs get created that never even existed before, and in that context, you have to rapidly change into a new role with a new set of knowledge and skills.

It just began to strike me [that in the future] maybe long-term commitment to a particular field — two years to study something to get a degree — may be too long and it may be that shorter amounts of time spent on more focused areas with less investment could, in some situations, be a better fit for people than a master’s degree.

All the data in the last few years has suggested that all of the growing wages, the growing income levels, are going to master’s degree people. We’ll see what happens as the evolution of the workforce and the economy continues to evolve.

3. Where do employers place the most value, on graduate degrees or certificates?

There’s no doubt employers place value on graduate degrees, but we’re in a transitional environment and one of the things we need employers to understand is when it might be more appropriate to have someone have a certificate versus another degree.

Part of the challenge, constantly, is the size of the investment taken to advance your education. Earning certain master’s degrees is extremely expensive. Now, in the era where individuals are having to go into substantial debt, certificates may be a way in which people can invest for a shorter amount of time with an amount of money they can afford, and then when they transition their role in the organization, maybe after a year or two, they can come back and get another certificate or advance into a master’s degree.

Employers are going to have to think differently about how they want to manage that workforce. Is the long-term master’s degree best for their employees? I just don’t think there’s going to be one answer, and part of our job will be to help employers understand the different value propositions. The hook that will probably get employers’ attention is, often times, they’re the ones funding graduate degrees, so that amount of money they’re spending, they may find better ways to spend it.

I don’t want to suggest that master’s degrees are going away or anything like that. The world of work is changing enough that we have to think of different ways the educational system can interface with that world of work.

I’m no longer convinced master’s degrees, by themselves, are the only things we need in that marketplace.

Are working professionals better-served by master’s degrees or graduate certificates?

4. Is there space for a “third option” certification that blends the best of both worlds?

One of the things the revolution in technology and education is bringing about is complete rethinking of all sorts of aspects of education, one of them being, how long does it take to learn something? In some cases, it may be that we have spent way more time having people try to learn stuff than is necessary if we had different ways to deliver it. So if personalized learning comes into vogue and we’re about to more effectively focus on the way an individual needs and wants to learn, it may be that they will be able to learn things a lot faster. It may be that the chunks of knowledge and skills we’ve thought of in the past — how long it takes us — may not take as long. Or maybe we break those chunks into smaller segments and we distribute them a different way.

The issue is that we’re going to see a lot of innovation in the way education is ‘chunked’ and how it’s delivered in the years ahead, and part of that is all about how we deal with this rapidly changing economy and, at the same time, the various changes being introduced to educational technology. It makes it a really interesting and exciting world because nobody really knows where it’s going.

The bottom line issue is we have educational institutions that are invested in a series of traditions that have been around a long time, but there may be different ways to do the educational experience and there will be plenty of people trying different ways to figure out how that should be done.

5. Is there anything you’d like to add about the growing influence of graduate certificates and their capacity to replace, in some sense, graduate degrees?

If you look at the relationship between income and education, there’s almost a perfect correlation. But over the last 20 years, most of the income growth that’s gone to people with degrees has gone to people with higher degrees.

My hunch is that as that continues, certificates will play a role in helping people move up the income ladder through advanced education — just not in programs that are quite as long or quite as expensive as they had been.

This interview has been edited for length.


6 Types of Credentials Non-Traditional Students Want

Author Perspective: