The Master of Science in Education, Curriculum and Instruction, no licensure concentration,
prepares those who already have a bachelor’s degree to become educators who are informed,
reflective, and engaged contributors in their communities. This non-licensure programs
provides participants with knowledge, skills, and dispositions in the areas of high
impact teaching strategies, cultural responsiveness, instructional technology, and
globalization of the curriculum and interdisciplinary teaching.
Benefits of the program
- 100% online
- Can satisfy provisional licensure requirements if you hold a provisional license
- Could complete in one year (Summer – Fall – Spring; or Fall-Spring-Summer; or Spring
-Summer – Fall) or take up to 6 years to complete at your own pace
- Career advancement
- Enhance and advance professional knowledge
- Preparation for a Ph.D. or Ed.D. program
- Tuition discounts for current Virginia educators
Working closely with an advisor, students develop a highly personalized program of
study that incorporates a number of professional learning elements, including reading,
assessment, pedagogy in general and special education, curriculum design and development
and perhaps advanced studies in content areas.
In addition to the coursework below, to earn the degree, you must also pass a comprehensive
assessment in the final semester of your coursework. You will have a choice of the
following for this assessment;
- Professional teaching portfolio (this option is only available for educators concurrently
working in a school);
- The National Evaluation Series (NES) assessment on professional knowledge (either
elementary or secondary); and
- Scholarly research
30-Hour Concentration
Common Core (12 credit hours)
EDET 620 - Education Technology: Applications, Applied Research and Integration
EDEF 605 - Educational Research
EDUC 670 - Basic Principles and Practices of Multicultural Education
EDEF 607 - Educational Foundations
Categorical elective categories (18 credit hours)
For each of these below, students have a wide range of choices as to which class to
take in each category.
Teaching and Curriculum Development (3 credit hours)
Reading (3 credit hours)
Assessment and Evaluation (3 credit hours)
Special Education (3 credit hours)
Open electives (2-courses, 6 credit hours) if you can make a justification for the
worth of a graduate-level class for your professional development, then it is likely
that you can take it. Thus, the courses could be in education or could be in some
content area of interest.