The academic programs offered at Gwinnett Tech have been selected to provide a wide range of career choices for students. Programs are reviewed annually to verify the continued need for training in each area, and new programs are added as the need is established and resources permit. The review process includes faculty, administration, occupational advisory committees at the state and local level, and the Technical College System of Georgia.
The purpose of each Gwinnett Tech program is to provide employment training through general education and technical courses. General education courses support continued personal and professional growth and are designed to enable students to develop and demonstrate skills in reading, writing, oral communications, and math. Technical courses provide the solid basis of skills and knowledge necessary for successful employment; they are up-to-date in content, use the most modern equipment possible, and are taught by subject area experts.
In many programs, students have the option of enrolling in degree, diploma, or certificate programs. These three program options are generally distinguished by length in semesters and the number and level of general education classes. Degree programs typically range from 60 to 73 credit hours in length; diploma programs, from 37 to 59; and certificate programs, from 9 to 36. With approval of the State Board, maximum semester credit hours required for graduation may be extended beyond the required maximum credit hours.
Technical certificate of credit programs are a popular option among students. Certificate programs are designed to provide training for entry-level or advanced positions in a brief time frame. Courses taken in these programs generally apply to either degrees or diplomas in the same program area.
Regular admission policies apply to all Gwinnett Tech programs of study. Some programs have additional admission requirements.
Academic Advisement
Students are assigned an academic advisor upon acceptance to a program of study. The Enrollment Support Center staff works in partnership with the academic program advisors. Students are encouraged to visit the Enrollment Support Center to meet with their Enrollment Advisor for course schedule planning and progress counseling, prior to registration. Although advisors assist students in academic planning, each student is responsible for meeting all graduation requirements.
Advisement Information/Instructor Office Hours
Students can view advisement information at the advisement tab at GTC-Web.org. All full-time instructors have scheduled office hours that are available from the instructor or through the office of academic affairs. Adjunct instructors are generally available for student conferences by appointment before or after scheduled class hours.
The Enrollment Support Center staff is available to meet with students on a walk-in basis between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday and between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. on Fridays. Enrollment Advisors are trained to assist students with questions regarding admissions, student records, financial aid and academic advisement.
Accreditation/Certifications/Agency Approvals
Accreditation is the process through which educational institutions are evaluated by regional and national agencies and associations to establish recognized program quality. Gwinnett Technical College is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC) to award the associate of applied science degree. Contact SACSCOC at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, Georgia 30033-4097 or call 404.679.4500 for questions about the accreditation of Gwinnett Technical College. All programs within the institution that require accreditation with independent accrediting/certification agencies are accredited/certified by those agencies. Programs of study that are specifically accredited/approved/certified by independent, professional, or state agencies are listed on the respective program pages along with the agencies that have accredited them.
Course Evaluations
Course evaluations are distributed for each instructor, each semester. All courses will be evaluated except for a select few externships, internships, practicums, and clinical courses.
Nontraditional Fields for Students
The term ‘nontraditional fields’ means occupations or fields of work, including careers in computer science, technology and other current and emerging high skill occupations, for which individuals from one gender comprise less than 25 percent of the individuals employed in each such occupation or field of work. Gwinnett Tech encourages students to participate in their program of choice regardless of traditional patterns of enrollment.
Program Completion Requirements
Students will be considered as having met the requirements for graduation with an associate degree, diploma, or certificate when the following conditions are met.
- Student has filed an application for graduation online at GTC-Web.org and paid the required $40 processing fee. Completion of course requirements does not automatically indicate an award of graduation. Students must complete an application for graduation to initiate the official audit. Graduation application must be received within two years of program completion in order to be awarded. Students who completed their program more than two years ago should contact graduation services for assistance at GraduationOffice@GwinnettTech.edu.
- Student has completed a program of study, including all required courses/electives, meeting minimum credit hour requirements.
- Student has earned a minimum grade of C or better in all courses and electives in the program of study.
- Student has completed at least 40 percent of required credit from the declared program of study at Gwinnett Technical College.
- Gwinnett Technical College will limit academic residency to no more than twenty-five percent of the degree requirements for all degrees for active-duty Service members. Academic residency can be completed at any time while active-duty Service members are enrolled. Reservist and National Guardsmen on active-duty are covered in the same manner.
- Student has paid all required fees, fines, and other financial obligations owed to Gwinnett Tech.
- Student has cumulative GPA of 2.0 or higher at the time that the graduation application is submitted.
- Student must complete all required developmental coursework in order to graduate from certificate, diploma or degree program. This requirement includes 097 courses for certificate program that do not require core classes.
- Students whose catalog year is Fall 2014 or newer according to their Degree Works audit are required to satisfy the FYES 1000 requirement, either by taking the course, or by exemption (if eligible) to be eligible to graduate.
- Please note that at the time a student graduates from his or her program, SCT 100/COMP 1000, introduction to computers, and many CIST courses cannot be older than seven years. The student’s options are to take the course(s) over or take an exemption exam if available in the Assessment Center. Please review your DegreeWorks audit with your Enrollment Advisor if you have any questions regarding FYES 1000 requirements, your degree progress, or required coursework.
Program Structure
Programs of Study/Majors
Gwinnett Tech offers a wide variety of programs of study (majors) to the prospective student. The greatest amount of time in degree, diploma, and certificate programs is devoted to technical or occupational courses in order to prepare students for employment upon graduation. A complete listing of programs can be found here .
General Education Courses
All associate degree and diploma programs include specified general education courses. Associate degree programs require at least 15 credits of general education college-level courses; and all programs require at least 3 credits from each of the following areas: English, humanities/fine arts, social/behavioral sciences, and natural sciences/ mathematics. Diploma programs require a minimum of 8 credit hours in English, mathematics, and interpersonal relations and professional development.
Area I - Language Arts/Communication
Area II - Social/Behavioral Sciences
Area III - Natural Sciences/Mathematics
Area IV - Humanities/Fine Arts
General Education Elective:
To meet the minimum required 15 semester credit hours in General Core Courses, an additional 3 semester credit hours must be taken from Area I, Area II, Area III, or Area IV.
Student Learning Outcomes
Gwinnett Tech, in conjunction with employers and others, believes that learning outcomes foster the knowledge, skills, and values essential to students in their pursuit of lifelong learning and a satisfying career. Achievement of these outcomes occurs over several courses throughout a student’s educational experience and guarantees access to all the overlying skills important for graduates of Gwinnett Technical College to have mastered.
Each academic program at Gwinnett Tech identifies outcomes to address the continuous improvement of education. The learning outcomes are directly addressed by methods and criteria designed to demonstrate achievement of those outcomes, and improvements are implemented that impact the quality of each program’s function. A learning outcome is a brief, clear statement identifying in measurable terms the intended result of achievement of competencies. Learning outcomes focus on the specific performance(s) students are expected to demonstrate when the outcome is achieved. The means of assessment is a description of the methodology used to gather data in order to determine whether the learning outcomes have been achieved. Success criterion is a statement of the specific standards that identify successful achievement of the intended student learning outcomes, which are as follows:
These include the following:
Collaboration and Teamwork: Students will work in teams of diverse composition in a respectful manner to achieve a specific goal and/or assignment
Communication Skills: Students will learn the ability to express oneself through the transfer of opinions, ideas, knowledge, and/or skills accomplished by writing, speaking, listening, and reading.
Logical Reasoning: Students will apply cognitive skills requiring mental agility and intellectual discipline gathered from, or generated by, creativity, observation, experience, reflection, reasoning, or communication. Logical reasoning is used to analyze, synthesize, or evaluate information associated with a new problem.
Mathematical Concepts: Students will learn that mathematical concepts are descriptions, properties, relationships, operations, and ideas that can be expressed quantitatively, numerically, algebraically, or geometrically.
Reading Comprehension: Students will demonstrate the ability to understand, analyze and evaluate readings and apply that learning to academic and professional contexts..
Research and Locating Information: Students will locate valid and reliable data sources and critically evaluate the appropriateness of information to industry standards.
Technical Competency and Proficiency: Students will demonstrate technical competency necessary to meet industry standards and entry level knowledge and skills appropraite to the discipline.
Technical Proficiency: The student will demonstrate technical competency necessary to meet industry standards of entry level knowledge and skills appropriate to the discipline.
Work Ethics: Students will demonstrate a commitment to evolve as a productive member of society and the workplace, through a concerted and continuous effort of reflection and adjustment of one’s values, habits, and attitudes, as they affect on-the-job performance and overall life goals.
Electives
Electives are designated in two ways - general and technical or technically-related. Students may choose general electives from the variety of programs offered at Gwinnett Tech. Students must choose technical or technically-related electives from the program area indicated with academic advisor approval. Students must also meet all prerequisites for elective courses, including test scores. For guidance on program-specific elective options, please consult DegreeWorks and meet with an Enrollment Advisor regarding any questions you may have.
Note: Diploma-level general education courses cannot be used as electives in associate degree programs.
Technical Education Guarantee
The Technical College System of Georgia has developed curriculum standards with the direct involvement of business and industry. These standards serve as the industry-validated specifications for each occupational program. These standards allow Georgia’s technical colleges to offer their business partners the following guarantee:
“If one of our graduates who was educated under a standard program and his/her employer agree that the employee is deficient in one or more competencies as defined in the standards, the technical college will retrain that employee at no instructional cost to employee or employer.”
This guarantee applies to all Gwinnett Tech graduates who are employed in their field of training and is in effect for a period of two years after graduation.
|