Difference between revisions of "Academic Credentials"

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[[Academic Credentials]] (hereinafter, the ''Lectio'') is the second [[lectio|lesson part]] of the '''[[Certifications of Study]]''' [[lesson]] that introduces its participants to [[educational credential]]s and related topics.
 
[[Academic Credentials]] (hereinafter, the ''Lectio'') is the second [[lectio|lesson part]] of the '''[[Certifications of Study]]''' [[lesson]] that introduces its participants to [[educational credential]]s and related topics.
  
[[File:Educaship-pipeline.png|400px|thumb|[[WorldOpp Pipeline]]]]This ''lesson'' belongs to the [[Introduction to Education]] session of the [[CNM Cyber Orientation]]. The ''Orientation'' is the second stage of the [[WorldOpp Pipeline]].
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[[File:Educaship-pipeline.png|400px|thumb|[[WorldOpp Pipeline]]]]This ''lesson'' belongs to the [[Introduction to Education]] session of [[EmployableU Concepts]].
  
  

Latest revision as of 20:50, 29 October 2023

Academic Credentials (hereinafter, the Lectio) is the second lesson part of the Certifications of Study lesson that introduces its participants to educational credentials and related topics.

This lesson belongs to the Introduction to Education session of EmployableU Concepts.


Content

The predecessor lectio is Educational Credentials.

KSA that classroom-based education targets

Script

An academic credential is an educational credential that is issued by an educational institution or credentialing body to certify specific academic achievements traditionally related to someone's knowledge.
Diplomas such as high school diplomas or GED (General Equivalency Diploma) commonly testify that the recipient has achieved specified objectives of a particular course of study.
Tertiary schools such as colleges and universities issue undergraduate and graduate degrees.
Undergraduate credentials include associate degrees, which course of study intends to last about two years, and Bachelor's degrees, which courses of study may last from three and up to seven years depending on institution and academic discipline. Undergraduate programs are overwhelmingly built on learning content delivery.
Graduate credentials include Master's degrees and PhD (Doctor of Philosophy) or similar highest, terminal degrees. Graduate programs are designed to last from one to four years beyond the coursework required by a Bachelor's degree. Both types of these credentials require independent research. The requirements to earn a PhD regularly include comprehensive examinations and work on thesis or dissertation based on extensive research.
There are two more opposite trends that are worthy to be mentioned.
On one hand, credentialism or academic inflation refers to the tendency of the devaluation of educational qualifications because of the needs of educational institutions to increase revenues and cut expenses, on one side, and increasing demands, on the other side. This process further provokes credential creep.
On another hand, a few occupations don't require academic achievements. All in all, the probability that you will ever meet any recruiter who has earned the degree in Recruitment is obsolete.

Key terms

Academic credential, diploma, associate degree, Bachelor's degree, Master's degree, PhD (Doctor of Philosophy, PhD degree), professional degree, credentialism (academic inflation)

Closing

Is the concept of credentialism explained well? --Yes/No/I'm not sure

Educational Institutions is the successor lectio.

Questions

Placement entrance exam