Do transfer students qualify for financial aid? ; How are transfer students supported on campus? ; What courses transfer to Harvard College? Is there a list of transferrable courses? ; Can I concentrate in business, journalism, law, or medicine?
or credit). You apply for CORe directly with Harvard Business School Online. 1 economics course (microeconomics or... degree-applicable courses at Harvard. Before enrolling in any degree...
Online and on-campus courses that fit your lifestyle. ; Number of 2024-25 Courses · 1,000+ ; Upcoming Term: Fall 2024 · Registration open through August 29
What you'll learn Understanding ancient Chinese philosophy to live a better life Tools for self-awareness, the power of ritual, and sensing the world around you How personal actions and...
Negotiating Salary ; Resilient Leadership ; Technology Entrepreneurship: Lab to Market ; Entrepreneurship in Emerging Economies ; Improving Your Business Through a Culture of Health ; Remote Work Revolution for Everyone ; Managing Happiness ; Innovating in Health Care ; Practical Improvement Science in Health Care: A Roadmap for Getting Results ; Contract Law: From Trust to Promise to Contract
A Harvard Education Designed for You Academic Opportunities, Online & On Campus Open Enrollment & “Earn Your Way In” Admissions Taking a single course or earning a certificate? You only need to mee...
In Innovations in Teamwork for Health Care, leaders in the field of organizational behavior and teamwork, Amy Edmondson, Professor at Harvard Business School, and Michaela Kerrissey...
3 Courses · $2,650 · Next 12-week session starts November 26th · Next 17-week session starts October 8th
Credit Level, Tuition Per 4-credit Course, Average Tuition of Peer Institutions ; Undergraduate credit, $2,100 ($525 per credit), $2,900 ; Graduate credit, $3,340 ($835 per credit), $4,330 ; Noncredit, $1,560, n/a
“This is a story about kids succeeding, about the success of an experiment,” says Cabot professor of American literature Elisa New, describing the online poetry course she taught last fall to an unusual set of enrollees: eleventh- and twelfth-graders from more than two dozen Title I high schools (serving mainly low-income students) across the country. At the end of the semester, roughly 250 students came away with four credits from the Harvard Extension School and a wider sense, New suggests, of what other possibilities might lie before the ...