Marymount University has launched “Upskilling for the What’s Next Economy,” a unique and comprehensive range of modular graduate certificates and degree qualifications that will provide students with technical, management, entrepreneurial and leadership skills and get them back to work.
Upskilling for the What’s Next Economy allows students to achieve a graduate level qualification in areas of economic demand such as cybersecurity, data science, health care, talent attraction, management and intrapreneurship. The program’s modular approach, unique in the greater Washington region, is built from six master’s degrees in technology and business management and 11 certificates in high-demand technology and business skill areas. Students can complete the program in as little as a year with unique qualifications that will help them stand out in the workforce.
Combined with six dual degree programs and one of the fastest-growing cybersecurity doctoral programs in the nation, Marymount is uniquely positioned to let students rapidly upskill themselves and demonstrate achievement in the areas that most suit the student’s interests and budget.
Upskilling for the What’s Next Economy incorporates the following degrees and certificates:
- Master’s Qualifications in Management (all offered in an accelerated eight-week format so students can complete in as little as a year)
- MBA
- Human Resources Management MA
- Health Care Management MS
- Master’s Qualifications in Technology
- Cybersecurity MS
- Information Technology MS
- Emerging Technology MS
- Accelerated Dual Degrees
- MBA/Cybersecurity MS
- MBA/Human Resource Management MA
- MBA/Information Technology MS
- MBA/Health Care Management MS
- Doctorate in Cybersecurity
- Eleven course certificates that allow students to achieve graduate level skill development in attractive career pathways
- Cybersecurity
- Data Science
- Digital Health
- Digital Transformation
- Health Care Informatics
- Health Care Practice Management
- Intrapreneurship
- Leadership
- Organizational Development
- Project Management
- Talent Management
- Nursing
- Accelerated second degree BSN
- Fully-online MSN
“In the What’s Next Economy, job and career opportunities go to those best prepared to perform,” said Dr. Irma Becerra, President of Marymount University. “As a leading mission-focused university, our unique faculty and programs can get our region’s talent back to work and help the economy recover. We know that people who have been displaced from their jobs and challenged by current economic conditions are best served by a modular approach that lets them build the qualifications they want as fast as they want. With our agility to create programs to answer today’s urgent needs, we can tell our region’s talented workforce that we have their backs as they aim to upskill and retool.”
Dr. Hesham El-Rewini, Provost at Marymount, notes that Upskilling for the What’s Next Economy is based on three principles – modularity, efficiency and resiliency.
“Modularity means that graduate programs work together so that our students can tailor their courses of study to achieve degree qualifications that uniquely position them in the job market, or to become leaders of their own organizations. Efficiency means we offer many accelerated programs that don’t reduce credit hours or academic rigor, but can be completed in less time than usual. Resiliency means that our programs combine face-to-face and online learning to cater to our students’ work-life balance during these stressful times content management.”
Jonathan Aberman, Dean of Marymount’s School of Business and Technology and a trusted voice on economic development and technology, sees Upskilling for the What’s Next Economy as an essential part of what the greater Washington region must do to grow new businesses and create new jobs.
“We can see clearly that in the What’s Next Economy, the best opportunities are going to be in technology. The unique structure at Marymount allows us to educate people in a cross-disciplinary way, so they can graduate with technical and managerial skills and an entrepreneurial mindset. I’m very happy to be at Marymount at a time when my prior experiences in helping to grow our economy can be applied to helping people get back to work.”