Microcredential

Last Updated: 04/01/2024

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Overview

Microcredentials are a record of focused learning achievement verifying what the learner knows, understands, or can do. They include an assessment based on clearly defined standards and are awarded by a trusted provider. They have stand-alone value and may also contribute to or complement other microcredentials or macrocredentials, including through recognition of prior learning. They meet the standards required by relevant quality assurance. 

Microcredentials are qualifications focused on specific professional or career disciplines and typically consist of one or more accelerated educational experiences. They can be online or digital educational credentials and usually cover more than a single course but less than a full degree. It is a certification - or representation of learning - that indicates a demonstrated competency in a skill set and is awarded upon completion of a short program. It is sometimes related to other credentials.

Microcredentials typically focus on a specific set of learning outcomes in a narrow field of learning over a shorter period of time. They are often provided by employers, private providers, professional organizations, commercial entities, training providers, and community organizations.

Definitions from various organizations include:

  • Credential Engine’s Counting U.S. Postsecondary & Secondary Credentials (2021): An online educational credential that covers more than a single course but is less than a full degree.
  • Credential Engine (2022): A micro-credential is (1) a record of focused learning achievement verifying what the learner knows, understands, or can do; (2) includes an assessment based on clearly defined standards and is awarded by a trusted provider; (3) has stand-alone value and may also contribute to or complement other micro-credentials or macro-credentials, including through recognition of prior learning; and (4) meets the standards required by relevant quality assurance.
  • Higher Education Quality Council of Ontario: A representation of learning, awarded for completion of a short program that is focused on a discrete set of competencies (i.e., skills, knowledge, attributes), and is sometimes related to other credentials.
  • National Education Association: Micro-credentials are a digital form of certification indicating demonstrated competency/mastery in a specific skill or set of skills.
  • OECD: Typically in the United States, micro-credentials are understood as learning activity consisting of “more than a single course but less than a full degree” and are labelled differently across providers, such as MicroMasters (edX), Nanodegree (Udacity) and Specialisation (Coursera). In the European Higher Education Area (EHEA), an emerging definition of micro-credentials is a “sub-unit of a credential or credentials that confer a minimum of 5 ECTS2 , and could accumulate into a larger credential or be part of a portfolio. Oceania tends to adapt a wider definition, and both of the above- mentioned types of micro-credentials, ranging from 5-40 credits, are regarded as micro-credentials.
  • State University of New York (SUNY): Microcredentials are compact credentials designed to provide job-ready skills and experiences and wherever possible, also provide a pathway to an initial or advanced degree. Microcredentials verify, validate, and attest that specific skills and/or competencies have been achieved; are endorsed by the issuing institution; having been developed through established faculty governance processes; and are designed to be meaningful and high quality.
  • UNESCO (2021): Typically focused on a specific set of learning outcomes in a narrow field of learning and achieved over a shorter period of time. Micro-credentials are offered by commercial entities, private providers and professional bodies, traditional education and training providers, community organisations and other types of organisations. While many micro-credentials represent the outcomes of more traditional learning experiences, others verify demonstration of achievements acquired elsewhere, such as in the workplace, through volunteering, or through personal interest learning. Micro-credentials are often promoted as an efficient way to upskill workers across the lifespan. A micro-credential: (1) is a record of focused learning achievement verifying what the learner knows, understands or can do; (2) includes assessment based on clearly defined standards and is awarded by a trusted provider; (3) has stand-alone value and may also contribute to or complement other micro-credentials or macro-credentials, including through recognition of prior learning; and (4) meets the standards required by relevant quality assurance.
  • Western Governors University: A form of credential endorsed by the issuing institution to verify, validate, and attest those specific competencies have been demonstrated. Microcredentials are comprised of sequences of achievements that usually align with employer and industry need. Micro credentials may standalone or be subsumed by a larger credential(s). A microcredential can be viewed as a nondegree offering (NDO). The term is preferred over NDO, as this term can carry a negative connotation. The WGU Unified Credential Framework enables a unified credentialing system where learners earn incremental value as they make their way to a higherlevel credential. Those microcredentials are educational currency employers should value.
  • Wikipedia: In higher education, a microdegree and also microcredentials and micromasters is a qualification focused upon a specified professional or career discipline and typically comprises one or more sources of accelerated educational experiences.

Ecosystem Relationship

Microcredentials provide job-ready skills and experiences, and can also provide a pathway to an initial or advanced degree. Microcredentials verify, validate, and attest that specific skills and/or competencies have been achieved, and therefore are parts of the credentialing ecosystem. Microcredentials can pair with other credentials and be used to build upon a worker’s capabilities in order to demonstrate skills to employers.

Types/Examples

MicroMasters (edX), Nanodegree (Udacity), and Specialisation (Coursera)

The State University of New York (SUNY) was one of the first Systems (or institutions) of higher education to adopt a broad micro-credential policy in 2018, largely following recommendations of the SUNY Micro-Credentialing Task Force that had begun its work three years earlier. SUNY now offers more than 500 microcredentials in 60+ discipline areas in high-demand fields, across its campuses. 

Alternative Terminology

  • Credential
  • Alternative credential
  • Short-term credential
  • Short-term program
  • Microdegree, micromasters
  • Non-degree offering

See Also

Micro-pathway: A micro-pathway is two or more stackable credentials that can be packaged as a validated market signal connecting learners to employment in high-growth careers.

Skills and Competencies: Skills define specific learned activities, and they range widely in terms of complexity. Knowing which skills a person possesses helps to determine whether their training and experience has prepared them for a specific type of workplace activity. Competencies identify the observable behaviors that successful performers demonstrate on the job. Those behaviors are the result of various abilities, skills, knowledge, motivations, and traits an employee may possess. Competencies take “skills” and incorporate them into on-the-job behaviors. Those behaviors demonstrate the ability to perform the job requirements competently.

Credential: A credential is a documented award by a responsible and authorized body that attests that an individual has achieved specific learning outcomes or attained a defined level of knowledge or skill relative to a given standard. Credential is often viewed as an umbrella term that includes degrees, diplomas, licenses, certificates, badges, and professional and industry certifications. Some do not include degrees within the term, credentials, creating confusion as to whether degrees are credentials.

References

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