GLEN ELLYN, Ill., July 25, 2017 -- The new Human Resource Management Certificate program at College of DuPage will provide students with the knowledge and skills for entry-level employment as a human resource generalist or specialist.
Recently approved by the Illinois Community College Board, the program is also for current human resource employees who want to advance their careers.
“Students who earn this certificate will be able to demonstrate detailed knowledge in key human resource areas,” said Jane Murtaugh, Professor of Business/Management/Marketing at College of DuPage. “The program is ideal for students pursuing a career in HR or current employees who secured HR positions without prior education in this area.”
Consisting of four classes, the 9 credit-hour certificate starts with an existing course, Human Resource Management, which is a prerequisite for three new ones: Talent Acquisition and Retention, Workforce Development and Compensation, and Strategic Human Resource Management. During the fall 2017 semester, students will register for and complete the three new classes concurrently on Wednesday evenings as part of an integrated, learning community.
“Students who are looking for this credential can earn the Human Resource Management Certificate in just two semesters,” Murtaugh said. “In addition, by offering these courses in the evening, students working full-time during the day can still enroll.
“Upon finishing the certificate, a student will leave with a portfolio consisting of sample documents, such as job descriptions, training/onboarding plans, performance management documents, and compensation pay structures that demonstrate the required competencies to secure an entry-level HR position, whether it’s a generalist or a more specific role such as a compensation or recruiting specialist.”
The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that employment of human resource specialists will increase 21 percent by 2020. Murtaugh said students pursuing their Associate in Applied Science in Management degree can select the three new classes as electives, while students earning the certificate first can apply the classes toward an associate’s degree.
“Through the new certificate, we are giving students a well-rounded look at human resource management careers,” she said. “In addition to learning course material, students will leave with dynamic, problem-solving skills.”
For more information, visit www.cod.edu/programs/business, email [email protected] or [email protected], or call (630) 942-2821 or (630) 942-2140.
Press contact: Brian Kleemann, (630) 942-2370, [email protected]


SoftBank Shares Slide After Arm Earnings Miss Fuels Tech Stock Sell-Off
Ford and Geely Explore Strategic Manufacturing Partnership in Europe
Anthropic Eyes $350 Billion Valuation as AI Funding and Share Sale Accelerate
Once Upon a Farm Raises Nearly $198 Million in IPO, Valued at Over $724 Million
Baidu Approves $5 Billion Share Buyback and Plans First-Ever Dividend in 2026
Rio Tinto Shares Hit Record High After Ending Glencore Merger Talks
Uber Ordered to Pay $8.5 Million in Bellwether Sexual Assault Lawsuit
Alphabet’s Massive AI Spending Surge Signals Confidence in Google’s Growth Engine
SpaceX Prioritizes Moon Mission Before Mars as Starship Development Accelerates
Instagram Outage Disrupts Thousands of U.S. Users
Australian Scandium Project Backed by Richard Friedland Poised to Support U.S. Critical Minerals Stockpile
Nvidia, ByteDance, and the U.S.-China AI Chip Standoff Over H200 Exports
TSMC Eyes 3nm Chip Production in Japan with $17 Billion Kumamoto Investment
Nvidia Nears $20 Billion OpenAI Investment as AI Funding Race Intensifies
Global PC Makers Eye Chinese Memory Chip Suppliers Amid Ongoing Supply Crunch
CK Hutchison Launches Arbitration After Panama Court Revokes Canal Port Licences
OpenAI Expands Enterprise AI Strategy With Major Hiring Push Ahead of New Business Offering 



