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Center for the Digital Globe: Graduate Certificates

Official Graduate Catalog Entry: To the Index

Established by the College of Business, School of Journalism, School of Law and the Department of Textile and Apparel Management in the College of Human Environmental Sciences

Contact Information
College of Business

About the Graduate Certificates

The Center for the Digital Globe offers two certificate options:

  • Stand-Alone Certificate (for students completing undergraduate and professional degrees)
  • Graduate-Degree-Dependent Certificate (for students completing a graduate degree)

Both options are explained below.

CDiG Stand-Alone Certificate (for students completing professional degrees)

The Center for the Digital Globe, established by the College of Business, School of Journalism, School of Law and Department of Textile and Apparel Management in the College of Human Environmental Sciences, offers an interdepartmental certificate to professional students of the University of Missouri. The prerequisite for the stand-alone certificate is a baccalaureate degree. The certificate program supplements the students' studies within the various colleges and schools that make up the University. This is not a degree-granting program. Instead, the certificate attests to the students' successful completion of a required course of study with emphasis on the managerial, theoretical and policy-related issues associated with digital media, electronic commerce and globalization.

Students receiving the stand-alone certificate will have demonstrated competencies in:

Technology
Students need not have achieved mastery of specific engineering, programming or application skills. Instead, the students must demonstrate a working understanding of how digital technologies function.
Global Communication
One of the primary characteristics of digital technologies, and particularly the Internet, are their function as worldwide communications media. Whether from the perspective of journalism, business or the law, the impact of these new communications channels has been substantial. Students should achieve an understanding of how new media are different from print or broadcast media and the consequences of those differences.
Business
Students should be well grounded in the principles, opportunities and ethical uses of electronic commerce and its impact on journalism, law and commercial practices.
Culture and Society
Digital media raise recurrent questions which call for political and social solutions. Students should be able to understand the broader issues raised by technological change and be prepared to take positions of leadership as such issues present themselves. Examples of such issues are questions of globalization, political boundaries, access, ownership and uses of information, marketing, etc.

To achieve the goals of the certificate and assure its value to students, the University and prospective employers or donors, the certificate program enjoys certain characteristics. Perhaps most fundamental is the inter-disciplinary nature of the program. While each department has the capability of offering a course emphasis, track or intra-departmental certificates to students in the area of technology and commerce, one of the fundamental concepts underlying the Center is the value and necessity of approaching these issues from the perspective of various disciplines. With these principles in mind, the program has been designed to assure that the interdisciplinary character of the course of work will be emphasized. The required course work compels students to come together for an interdisciplinary introduction to their studies and permits them to work separately and within their respective disciplines for further study. Students come together for a concluding experience that involves working collectively through a case study.

Academic Requirements for Stand-Alone Certificate

Eligibility: Prerequisite for the stand-alone certificate is a baccalaureate degree. Professional students who are pursuing the stand-alone certificate must dually enroll in the Graduate School as Non-Degree Graduate Students and receive graduate credit for their 12 semester hours of stand-alone certificate courses.

Credits: At least 12 eligible credit hours, consisting of an introductory, interdisciplinary course (Management 8100), 6 credit hours in two or more eligible graduate courses, and a concluding seminar/research project course (Journalism 8052). The course of work for certificate students is more specifically described as:

  1. Management 8100: Exploring the Digital Globe, 3 credits.
    This inter-departmental course introduces students to the impacts of technological change and globalization from the perspective of business, law and journalism. Students are introduced to electronic commerce, digitization and globalization to prepare them to respond to the challenges of the digital globe. Students do not acquire specific technological skills; they acquire a working understanding of how digital technologies function.

    The course is taught by faculty from the journalism, business and law schools, and from the Department of Textile and Apparel Management of the College of Human Environmental Sciences. Visiting speakers, including speakers presenting programs for the Center for the Digital Globe, meet with the class to share their research and experience.
  2. 6 credits of graduate course work
    The courses taken to satisfy this requirement are those that have been approved by the Center's faculty in consultation with the academic programs that offer the courses. The approved courses are graduate level courses that address one or more of the competencies specified above.
  3. Journalism 8052: Case Studies in the Digital Globe, 3 credits
    The course is designed to further develop the levels of understanding and skills obtained in previous course work. In this class, students will achieve a better understanding of how new media are different from print or broadcast media and the consequences of those differences. Students are introduced to the principles, opportunities and ethical use of electronic commerce. Students critically analyze issues raised by technological change, including globalization, political boundaries, access, ownership and uses of information, marketing, etc.
    As with the introductory class, this course is taught by faculty from a variety of departments. Visiting speakers, including speakers presenting programs for the Center for the Digital Globe, meet with the class to share their research and experience.
  4. Grades
    Students must maintain a minimum grade of 3.0 or equivalent in each course to receive credit toward completion of the certificate.

Stand-Alone Certificate Requirements

To be eligible for the stand-alone certificate in the Center for the Digital Globe, students are required to take four courses for graduate credit: two courses offered through CDiG and two electives. The required courses are Management 8100 (Exploring the Digital Globe) and Journalism 8052 (Case Studies in the Digital Globe). The two electives should be determined in consultation with the student's CDiG affiliated advisor.

To receive the certificate, students must fill out the "Application for a Graduate Certificate" form.

The form asks for a list of courses taken by the student that fills the certificate requirements. The form must be signed by the student, the CDiG executive director and the graduate dean. A copy of the student's approved degree program must be attached to the certificate application form when submitting it for the CDIG executive director's approval. The form then must be submitted to the Graduate School, 210 Jesse Hall.

CDiG Graduate Degree Dependent Certificate (for students completing a graduate degree)

The Center for the Digital Globe, established by the College of Business, School of Journalism, School of Law and Department of Textile and Apparel Management in the College of Human Environmental Sciences, offers an interdepartmental certificate to graduate students of the University of Missouri. The certificate program supplements the students' graduate studies within the various colleges and schools that make up the University. This is not a degree-granting program. Instead, the certificate attests to the students' successful completion of a required course of study with emphasis on the managerial, theoretical and policy-related issues associated with digital media, electronic commerce and globalization.

Students receiving the graduate degree dependent certificate will have demonstrated competencies in:

Technology
Students need not have achieved mastery of specific engineering, programming or application skills. Instead, the students must demonstrate a working understanding of how digital technologies function.
Global Communication
One of the primary characteristics of digital technologies, and particularly the Internet, are their function as worldwide communications media. Whether from the perspective of journalism, business or the law, the impact of these new communications channels has been substantial. Students should achieve an understanding of how new media are different from print or broadcast media and the consequences of those differences.
Business
Students should be well grounded in the principles, opportunities and ethical uses of electronic commerce and its impact on journalism, law and commercial practices.
Culture and Society
Digital media raise recurrent questions which call for political and social solutions. Students should be able to understand the broader issues raised by technological change and be prepared to take positions of leadership as such issues present themselves. Examples of such issues are questions of globalization, political boundaries, access, ownership and uses of information, marketing, etc.

To achieve the goals of the certificate and assure its value to students, the University and prospective employers or donors, the certificate program enjoys certain characteristics. Perhaps most fundamental is the inter-disciplinary nature of the program. While each department has the capability of offering a course emphasis, track or intra-departmental certificates to students in the area of technology and commerce, one of the fundamental concepts underlying the Center is the value and necessity of approaching these issues from the perspective of various disciplines. With these principles in mind, the program has been designed to assure that the interdisciplinary character of the course of work will be emphasized. The required course work compels students to come together for an interdisciplinary introduction to their studies and permits them to work separately and within their respective disciplines for further study. Students come together for a concluding experience that involves working collectively through a case study.

Academic Requirements for Graduate Degree Dependent Certificate

SPECIAL NOTE: No more than six of the twelve credits necessary for the CDiG Graduate Degree Dependent Certificate may count toward the graduate degree.

Eligibility: Students who have completed their baccalaureate studies and are enrolled in a master's, doctoral or professional program and working toward a graduate degree at the University of Missouri.

Credits: At least 12 eligible credit hours, consisting of an introductory, interdisciplinary course (Management 8100), 6 credit hours in two or more eligible graduate courses, and a concluding seminar/research project course (Journalism 8052). The course of work for certificate students is more specifically described as:

  1. Management 8100: Exploring the Digital Globe, 3 credits.
    This inter-departmental course introduces students to the impacts of technological change and globalization from the perspective of business, law and journalism. Students are introduced to electronic commerce, digitization and globalization to prepare them to respond to the challenges of the digital globe. Students do not acquire specific technological skills; they acquire a working understanding of how digital technologies function.

    The course is taught by faculty from the journalism, business and law schools, and from the Department of Textile and Apparel Management of the College of Human Environmental Sciences. Visiting speakers, including speakers presenting programs for the Center for the Digital Globe, meet with the class to share their research and experience.
  2. 6 credits of graduate course work
    The courses taken to satisfy this requirement are those that have been approved by the Center's faculty in consultation with the academic programs that offer the courses. The approved courses are graduate level courses that address one or more of the competencies specified above.
  3. Journalism 8052: Case Studies in the Digital Globe, 3 credits
    The course is designed to further develop the levels of understanding and skills obtained in previous course work. In this class, students will achieve a better understanding of how new media are different from print or broadcast media and the consequences of those differences. Students are introduced to the principles, opportunities and ethical use of electronic commerce. Students critically analyze issues raised by technological change, including globalization, political boundaries, access, ownership and uses of information, marketing, etc.
    As with the introductory class, this course is taught by faculty from a variety of departments. Visiting speakers, including speakers presenting programs for the Center for the Digital Globe, meet with the class to share their research and experience.
  4. Grades
    Students must maintain a minimum grade of 3.0 or equivalent in each course to receive credit toward completion of the certificate.

Graduate Degree Dependent Certificate Requirements

To be eligible for the graduate degree dependent certificate in the Center for the Digital Globe, students are required to take four courses: two courses offered through CDiG and two electives. The required courses are Management 8100 (Exploring the Digital Globe) and Journalism 8052 (Case Studies in the Digital Globe). The two electives should be determined in consultation with the student's graduate advisor. SPECIAL NOTE: No more than six of the twelve credits necessary for the CDiG Graduate Degree Dependent Certificate may count toward the graduate degree.

To receive the certificate, students must fill out the "Application for a Graduate Certificate" form.

The form asks for a list of courses taken by the student that fills the certificate requirements. The form must be signed by the student, the CDiG executive director and graduate dean. A copy of the student's approved graduate degree program must be attached to the certificate application form when submitting it for the CDIG executive director's approval. The form then must be submitted to the Graduate School, 210 Jesse Hall.

For More Info

For more information, contact The Center for the Digital Globe; 306H Cornell Hall; University of Missouri; Columbia, MO 65211.