Minority-Serving National University to Offer Google Certificate Program for Both Undergraduates and Graduate Students

Nonprofit Minority Serving Institution (MSI) National University (NU) has partnered with Google to offer Google Career Certificates in six high-demand industry fields, the institution announced recently, for both undergraduates and graduate students.

This is the first time a university has offered this program at both the undergraduate and graduate levels, NU said in a release.

The courses will teach job skills in cybersecurity, data analytics, project management, digital marketing and e-commerce, IT support, and UX design. Enrollment is open this fall at no or low cost to current students, alumni, and employees, the university added.

NU said the courses, which have been built by industry professionals, will be offered as a combination of standalone training, elective classes, and skills training as a central part of the curriculum.

"The addition of these new certificates across multiple pathways and degree programs is reflective of our commitment to meeting students where they are — and creating a credential-rich pathway for every learner," said Susan Zukowski, vice president professional and continuing education.

Students who have already obtained a Google certificate may also be able to take up to five courses in various degree programs, including information technology, engineering, business, human resources, and marketing, the university said.

Students should be able to earn these certificates in six months or less, saving them anywhere from $1,300 and $6,900 in tuition costs.

The Google Certificate program is part of NU's credential-rich pathways initiative, which fosters stackable credentials so that learners have multiple ways to access career opportunities while learning.

"We're finding strategic ways to embed and integrate industry-recognized credentials throughout our degree pathways because it can unlock time, resources and career opportunities for the students that we serve," said Mark Milliron, NU's president and CEO.

The university said it will closely monitor certificate completion rates and evaluate how such credentials contribute to students' career advancement.

To learn more, read the university's release.

About the Author

Kate Lucariello is a former newspaper editor, EAST Lab high school teacher and college English teacher.

Featured

  • circuit patterns

    Anthropic Launches Lower-Cost Claude Sonnet 5

    Anthropic has released Claude Sonnet 5, positioning the model as its most autonomous mid-tier offering to date and a lower-cost alternative to its flagship Opus 4.8 system. The company said the model can plan multi-step tasks, operate tools such as browsers and terminals, and complete agentic work at a level that previously required larger and more expensive models.

  • robot hand holding stacks of coins

    Designing AI Systems for Financial Aid

    Financial aid offices have been slow to adopt AI, risking technological stagnation at a critical early student touchpoint. Systematic AI integration can improve student experiences and strengthen institutional positioning.

  • businesspeople in silhouette with colorful network lines

    Report: AI Will Reshape Work More than Replace It, but Global Impact Is Uneven

    Richer countries face greater exposure to AI-driven changes than developing countries, which are less exposed to AI but risk being left behind, according to a joint report from the International Labour Organization and World Bank.

  • Man types on laptop in data center

    Point-in-Time Restore Now Generally Available for Windows 11

    Microsoft has made point-in-time restore generally available for Windows 11, giving users and IT administrators a built-in way to roll back PCs after bad updates, driver problems, app corruption, or other issues.