Definitions and Levels of Approval


Certificate Program

Graduate

  • Not offered at the graduate level.

Undergraduate

  • A structured set of courses specified by a Department, Faculty or Affiliated University College to allow students to acquire a specific set of skills or competencies.
  • May be pursued concurrently with, or subsequent to, the completion of a Bachelor's degree.
  • Should be awarded when the following criteria are met:
    1. normally a pre-degree program;
    2. normally requiring up to the equivalent of one calendar year or more to complete; and
    3. normally consisting of a minimum of 3.0 courses, frequently in combination with a certificate-credit component. 


Collaborative/Joint Program

Graduate

  • A multidisciplinary or interdisciplinary experience offered to students enrolled in one of a number of participating existing graduate programs.
  • Students are registered in the participating degree program, meeting the requirements of the participating program as well as those of the collaborative program.

Undergraduate

  • A 2 + 2 (or similar) program with a community college or with another university.


Diploma Program

Graduate

  • A structured set of courses specified by a Program to allow students to acquire a set of skills or competencies.
  • For-credit diploma program that meets one of the following specifications:
    • Type 1: Awarded when a candidate admitted to a master’s program leaves the program after completing a certain proportion of the requirements. Students are not admitted directly to these programs.
    • Type 2: Offered in conjunction with a master’s (or doctoral) degree, the admission to which requires that the candidate be already admitted to the master’s (or doctoral) program. This represents an additional, usually interdisciplinary, qualification.
    • Type 3: A stand-alone, direct-entry program, generally developed by a unit already offering a related master’s or doctoral degree, and designed to meet the needs of a particular clientele or market.

Undergraduate

  • A structured set of courses specified by a Department, Faculty or Affiliated University College to allow students to acquire a specific set of skills or competencies.
  • Normally post-graduate programs.
  • Should be awarded when the following criteria are met:
    1. normally a post-degree program;
    2. normally requiring the equivalent of one calendar year or more to complete; and
    3. normally consisting of a minimum of 5.0 courses.


Field

Graduate

  • An area of strength, specialization or concentration within a program that is approved through the review process.

Undergraduate

  • Not offered at the undergraduate level.


Major Modification

Graduate

  • A significant change in program requirements, which may include:
    • a significant change to the learning outcome(s) of the program
      • a significant change to the learning outcome(s) is one that changes, broadens or limits the subsequent career or educational opportunities of the graduates (e.g., a master’s program currently aimed at educating doctoral program-bound graduates revises its curriculum to yield master’s graduates with practical experience in applied areas directly relevant to professional careers)
    • elimination, introduction, or replacement of a thesis requirement
    • introduction of a course-based option
    • replacement of a course-requirement with a practical or experiential requirement
    • creation, deletion or renaming of a field.

Undergraduate

  • Introduction of new module (honors specialization, specialization, or major) that comprises primarily existing courses and that is offered with existing faculty expertise and resources.
  • Introduction of a new diploma or certificate program.
  • Any change to an existing program that affects the learning outcome(s) of the program.
    • a significant change to the learning outcome(s) is one that changes, broadens or limits the subsequent career or educational opportunities of the graduates.
  • Any change that is considered more substantive than what is appropriate for Western’s Deans Academic Process (DAP) for review and approval.


Minor Revision

Graduate

  • A change to the content or title of a course.
  • A change that does not affect the program requirements or learning outcomes.

Undergraduate

  • Submissions to DAP (the Deans’ Academic Programs Committee or "Virtual Committee" of SCAPA), which:
    • revise a module or program
    • introduce, revise or withdraw a course
    • change the weight of a 1.0 (full) course to a 0.5 (half) course, or vice versa. (This is done by withdrawing one course and introducing a new one in its place with a new number. The former course is listed as an antirequisite.)
    • change the essay designation on a course, e.g., A/B to F/G or vice versa
    • delete, change, or add an antirequisite, prerequisite or corequisite
  • Minor course changes include:
    • changes to titles or descriptions of courses which do not substantively change the course content
    • changes to course hours
  • Introduction of a new module that has requirements and learning outcomes substantially the same as an existing module.


Module

Graduate

  • Not offered at the graduate level.

Undergraduate

  • A structured set of courses specified by a Department, Faculty or Affiliated University Western’s IQAP 5 College to fulfill the requirements of an Honors Specialization, Specialization, Major or Minor. Modules are the central components that determine the disciplinary character of a Degree. Students can combine different modules from different subjects, departments and Faculties to construct individualized, interdisciplinary degrees.
  • Honors Specialization module:
    • Comprised of 9.0 or more courses designated by a Department, Faculty or Affiliated University College; available only in an Honors Bachelor Degree (Four-Year).
  • Specialization module:
    • Comprised of 9.0 or more courses designated by a Department, Faculty or Affiliated University College; available only in a Bachelor Degree (Four-Year).
  • Major module:
    • Comprised of 6.0 or 7.0 courses designated by a Department, Faculty or Affiliated University College. This module is available in the Bachelor Degree (Four- Year), the Bachelor Degree (Three-Year), and the Honors Bachelor Degree (Four- Year).
  • Minor module:
    • Comprised of 4.0 or 5.0 courses designated by a Department, Faculty or Affiliated University College. A degree with a single Minor is not available. A Minor may be combined with another Minor in a Bachelor Degree (Three-Year) or a Minor module may be taken as an additional module within the Honors Bachelor Degree (Four-Year), the Bachelor Degree (Four-Year), or the Bachelor Degree (Three-Year).


New Program

Graduate

  • Any degree or program currently approved by Senate which has not bee previously approved by the Quality Council or its predecessor.
  • A “new program” is brand new; the program has substantially different program requirements and substantially different learning outcomes from those of any existing program offered at Western.
  • A new master’s of doctoral program (e.g., introduction of a PhD Program in Film Studies).
  • A new professional master’s program in an area where Western already has a thesis/research-based master’s program (e.g., introduction of a MA in Professional Writing).

Undergraduate

  • Any degree, degree program, or specialization currently approved by Senate which has not bee previously approved by the Quality Council or its predecessor.
  • A “new program” is brand new; the program has substantially different program requirements and substantially different learning outcomes from those of any existing program offered at Western.
  • A new program is a program consisting primarily of new courses offered predominantly by new faculty members who are recruited to provide the program area expertise previously lacking at Western. In addition to the need for new faculty members, new programs also require additional resources, such as space and library collections.
  • A new program could be:
    • A new degree program (e.g., BHSc – Bachelor of Health Science).
    • A new disciplinary program (e.g., BSc in Oceanography).
    • A new module, if the module has requirements and learning outcomes that are substantially different from those of any existing module.

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Contacts

Candace Loosley Office of the Vice-Provost (School of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies)

Sandra Thornton Office of the Vice-Provost (Academic Programs and Students) [Registrar]

Shannon LaHay Office of the Provost & Vice-President (Academic)

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