Doctor of Education in Educational Leadership and Change

Empire State University’s Doctor of Education (Ed.D.) in Educational Leadership and Change (ELC) is designed to prepare mid-career practicing professionals to be successful in higher-education leadership positions. The ELC program uses a scholar-practitioner model, which supports self-directed, collaborative learning among researchers, practitioners, educators, and students. Scholar-practitioners tackle problems they identify in their own practice, apply their scholarship to study and solve these problems in collaborative ways, and include important stakeholders at multiple levels.

Why SUNY Empire's EDLC program?

Empire State University's professional Ed.D. program is based on principles articulated by the Carnegie Project on the Education Doctorate. The program:

  • Is framed around questions of equity, ethics, and social justice to solve complex problems of practice in higher education
  • Prepares higher-education leaders who can construct and apply knowledge to improve the lives of individuals, higher-education institutions, and communities
  • Provides opportunities for candidates to develop and demonstrate collaboration and communication skills so they can work with diverse communities and build partnerships
  • Provides opportunities to analyze the problems of higher-education institutions and develop solutions
  • Is grounded in and develops a professional knowledge base that integrates practical and research knowledge of higher education and higher education leadership and that links theory with systemic and systematic inquiry
  • Emphasizes the creation, transformation, and use of professional knowledge and practice.[1]

Our program prepares students to develop knowledge and skills in six areas: effective communication, applied research and data-informed decision-making, leading innovation and change, overcoming institutional barriers to change, ethical leadership, and promotion of social justice.

Program Learning Outcomes

ELC graduates will be able to:

  1. Effectively communicate in oral and written form to a variety of stakeholders (e.g. students, employees, accreditors, and scholars) in both professional and scholarly settings
  2. Apply research and data analysis to make leadership decisions that guide an institution of higher education through the process of innovation and change
  3. Translate theories and principles of higher-education leadership, change management, and innovation to practice as a scholar-practitioner to make decisions that guide an institution of higher education through the process of innovation and change
  4. Overcome barriers to the implementation of strategic change in higher education institutions
  5. Make ethical leadership and management decisions to complex problems, in ambiguous situations, with multiple stakeholders
  6. Lead an institution of higher education to become more socially just through policies and strategies

Learning in a community of practice (CoP) is one of the central tenets of our program and is facilitated through a low-residency model. This model combines frequent online interaction among students and faculty with four focused residencies. Each residency (one virtual and three in-person typically held on a Thursday through Saturday) is an intensive meeting with workshops, seminars and presentations focused on building a CoP, sharing professional knowledge, celebrating group accomplishments, and framing/supporting major program milestones. Each cohort constructs its CoP throughout the program, learning together in embodied and integrated ways. The cohort of students enter the program together and become a CoP, staying connected between residencies via an innovative programmatic online space that helps sustain a sense of shared commitment over time. Students finish their program with a directed research project, generally based in their own site of practice, or directed at issues in their field.

Admission

This program is for higher-education professionals looking to advance into upper-leadership positions in higher-education institutions. Applications for admission are reviewed holistically, taking into account the totality of an applicant’s educational and professional accomplishments and potential for successful completion of the program and leadership in higher education. Applicants to the Ed.D. in ELC program are required to have a master’s degree. Additionally, at minimum, applicants should complete coursework in content areas recommended by the Council for the Advancement of Higher Education Programs (CAHEP) for master’s degrees in higher education administration; please note that these courses may be completed before the program begins (they are offered at Empire during the summer term) or within one calendar year of program entry:

  • History and Philosophy of Higher Education
  • Economics and/or Finance of Higher Education

Program Requirements

The Ed.D. in ELC involves a total of 54 credit hours beyond the master’s degree required for admission. The required prerequisite coursework in the areas recommended by the Council for the Advancement of Higher Education Programs provide the foundation on which the Ed.D. in ELC builds to prepare mid-career professionals to be successful leaders in higher education. The course work begins with 12 credits of core coursework in the fundamental areas of leadership and change, 9 credits of research coursework, and 12 credits of advanced coursework. Students then complete 6 credits of electives and the capstone sequence, which include both a comprehensive assessment and a dissertation. Students may transfer up to 6 credits into the doctoral program. To be eligible for consideration, transfer credits must be:

  • 7000-level or above
  • from a regionally accredited college or university
  • a final grade of B or better
  • no more than six years old at the time of the student's admission to the graduate program

The following section outlines the required courses as well as the interpersonal experience, which involve close mentorship, four residencies and access to an online community space that supplements the online coursework.

Course Requirements

  Courses Credits
Core

EDLC 6000: Foundations of Doctoral Study: Critical Analysis and Communication

EDLC 6001: Principles of Higher Education Leadership

EDLC 6002: Organizational Change Theory and Practice

EDLC 6006: Ethical Leadership in the Academy

12

Research

EDLC 6003: Research Methods in Education

EDLC 6004: Qualitative Research Analysis through Applied and Action Research

EDLC 6005: Quantitative Research Methods

9

Advanced Core

EDLC 7003: Models of Organizational Administration and Finance

EDLC 7005: Leading Change for Social Justice and Diversity

EDLC 7020: Perspectives in Higher Education Administration, Management and Leadership

EDLC 7021: Institutional Culture and Strategic Change Management in Higher Education

12

Electives (choose 2)

EDLC 7004: Leadership and Change in Local and Global Contexts

EDLC 7011: Understanding Adult Education Practice

EDLC 7012: The Changing Contexts of Adult Learning

EDLC 7022: Student Development and Administration in Higher Education

EDLC 7041: Leadership and Contemporary Issues in Learning and Teaching 

EDLC 7050: Assessment and Accreditation in Higher Education

6

Capstone
Courses

EDLC 8000: Professional Portfolio Seminar

EDLC 8001: Advanced Research Methods

EDLC 8002: Dissertation 1

EDLC 8003: Dissertation 2

EDLC 8004: Dissertation 3

15

Total Credits

 

54

Typical Program Schedule

The Ed.D. in ELC is designed to be completed in four years. All courses are conducted online. Students are required to attend four residencies. In the first year of the program, the fall residency is held virtually shortly after the start of the term. In that first year students will also attend a summer residency that is held in person. Years two and three of the program also require an in-person summer residency. Residencies are typically held on a Thursday through Saturday. In-person residencies are held in the capital district region of New York. 

While the program is designed for students to progress through as a cohort through the year three residency, there may be circumstances under which a student may not be able to progress with his or her cohort. In these rare instances, students, in consultation with their advisor, may drop down into a successive cohort or alter their enrollment sequence to stay with their existing cohort. Either option may involve taking some courses as independent studies to realign a student’s progress with the appropriate cohort.

The Program Experience

ELC is a low-residency, online degree program that meets professionals’ needs for flexibility and academic quality. Residencies (one virtual and three in-person) are supported by synchronous and asynchronous interaction online. SUNY Empire’s courses are offered in the Desire-to-Learn learning management system, but ELC cohorts also interact in a specially designed online community space (“EdD Home”) that helps keep students and faculty connected throughout the four-year program.

Residencies

ELC requires students to participate in four residencies. In the first year of the program, students attend a virtual residency in their fall term and an in-person residency in their summer term. The next two residencies are in-person and only in the summer terms of years two and three. The residencies are usually held on a Thursday through Saturday. These intensive residencies include faculty-led seminars, guest speakers, collaborative student presentations, and individual time with faculty to discuss program and dissertation processes.

[1] The CPED Framework©

 

 

About our students

Alfred State College

Columbia University

CUNY Queens College

Dutchess Community College

Genisis Healthcare

Hofstra University

OLV Human Services

Sarah Lawrence College

SUNY Adirondack

SUNY Brockport

SUNY Buffalo

SUNY Delhi

SUNY Empire

SUNY Farmingdale

SUNY Oneonta

SUNY Stonybrook

SUNY Upstate Medical 

 

  • Support indigenous students' success: the SUNY system
  • How do student employment activities support a sense of engagement?
  • Traumatic brain injury and Indications of post-secondary education
  • Interdisciplinary faculty collaborations and student learning: Exploring Intersections and impact
  • Experiences of racially minoritized woman leaders across US colleges and universities
  • A feminist approach to the support of women faculty and administrators in higher education
  • Learning management system incorporation of DEI principles
  • New learning opportunities and workforce engagement across NY public colleges and universities
  • Understanding the needs of low SES students during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond
  • LatinX student support: Exploring policy and practice in NYS
  • Supports for mental health among racially minorities college students
  • Support for lower SES students pursuing college/university in NYS
  • Academic support for lower SES students pursuing colleges in NYS
  • Higher education access among foster youth
  • Campus medical center support of vaccine uptake among LGBTQIA+studnts
  • Community College and post-COVID strategic enrollment in NYS
  • Student supports across hybrid DPT programs
  • A Delphi Study: How to assess experiential learning in nursing student placements
  • COVID-19's effect on mathematics preparation among first-year college students and the effect of remedial programs