These questions are designed to produce the equivalent of a 2-page summary of the proposed program that can be used to create an Early Alert document that will be submitted to the Statewide Provosts Council.
4. What is the anticipated enrollment (Fall Term headcount) at the launch of the program and the planned goals for 5 and 10 years out?
Create, Change or Terminate a College or Academic Unit
Objectives, Functions, and Activities
The proposed course designator should have an identified purpose within the curricular structure of Oregon State University.
Responsibility for the integrity and oversight of the proposed course designator should be clearly identified.
Who will benefit from the new course designator, and what changes will result from its implementation.
Admin update only. Adding Banner code.
Foundations of Urban Forestry Management
Online via Ecampus
Sarah Low, Assistant Professor of Practice, sarah.low@oregonstate.edu
Description and Requirements
The Foundations of Urban Forestry Management microcredential helps students develop a foundational understanding of tree care and urban forestry management. This program prepares students to advance urban forestry careers empowered with a strong understanding of the technical aspects of tree care and an ability to apply theory, research, and case studies to urban forestry management. Students will be able to plan for desired future conditions to meet community priorities, prescribe management actions needed to meet identified priorities, and evaluate success of these actions. Students will learn how the use, management, and distribution of urban forests are affected by laws, policies, economic factors (both market and non-market), and characteristics (including demographic, cultural, ethnic, and “values” differences) of private and public resource owners and users.
The audience for this microcredential includes: 1. professionals in tree care fields who do not have a bachelor’s degree and are seeking to either complete a bachelor’s degree or to demonstrate college-level experience with urban forestry, 2. Professionals with degrees in unrelated fields who are seeking to transition into urban forestry, and 3. Students who are currently seeking to pursue urban forestry and want to use a microcredential to demonstrate an educational specialty in the field.
Students who complete this microcredential can use it towards completing one of OSU’s existing degree programs allowing students to use this program as a steppingstone towards other educational accomplishments and careers in urban forestry and related fields. This microcredential also aligns with ISA industry recognized credentials providing additional benefits for students.
All three courses are taught twice a year, so students could complete the program in one year, if they started with Urban Forestry (FES 350/ HORT 350).
No
Urban Forestry
FES 350/HORT 350, FES 447/HORT 447, and FES 455/HORT 455
Policy Development
FES 455/HORT 455
Hazard Identification
FES 447/HORT 447
Tree Inventory - FES 447/HORT 447 Arboriculture
Community Outreach - FES 350/HORT 350 Urban Forestry
Community Development - FES 455/HORT 455 Urban Forest Planning, Policy and Management
Problem Reporting - FES 447/HORT 447 Arboriculture
This microcredential will fill an identified gap in the urban forestry field. Students will be able to use this microcredential to advance their careers. As a result, it will support the goal of "A university that fuels a thriving world".
This microcredential will bring new students to OSU. These students may very likely pursue bachelor's or master's degrees after enrolling in the microcredntial. It will therefore support the target to: "Increase online-only enrollment to 30,000."
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
MCUF
Memorandum of Understanding
MOU for Offering an Existing Academic Program at a Different Physical Campus
Program Coordination Requirements
OSU-Cascades leadership and the College Dean agree that there is sufficient coordination of the program between all campuses offering the program.
Both (all) campuses agree that the following individuals are appointed as the primary lead for program development coordination, unless otherwise notified of an alternate:
A major factor in continued excellence is the maintenance and refreshment of courses and the program. As part of maintenance, the College and any campus offering the program commit to the following:
Alternative Summative Assessment
Alternative Summative Assessments (ASA) are a substitution for the committee-driven oral exam present in most MA/MS degrees. The ASA should provide similar insights as the oral exam into the program and graduate learning outcomes.
Is the student assigned a traditional three-graduate-faculty member committee?
Are you proposing more than one Core Ed course in this form?
Is this a new OSU course?
Is this course currently in the Bacc Core?
Is this course part of a College of Science series?
Is this a Common Course Numbered (CCN) course?
Prerequisites and Restrictions
Faculty (Re)Designing The Course
In-person and Hybrid Courses
Ecampus and Other Locations
Ecampus and Other Locations
Ecampus and Other Locations
Ecampus and Other Locations
DPO Courses