01-17-2023, 06:56 PM
(This post was last modified: 01-17-2023, 06:59 PM by Maniac Craniac.)
@asianphd @collegecareerstudent Awesome!!! I'd love to hear all about it. I wonder if it's doable while I'm simultaneously working on other courses ?
@tuebookworm10 Your mileage may vary. It's a post-grad cert from an accredited American university. I'm sure it would be accepted as a valid credential in the UK, but how "useful" it will be depends on what you want to "use" it for. There's no precedent for what a certificate in Telehealth can do for your career since there aren't too many schools that offer them and they're all very new. As for post nominals, I can only share my own experience that I've never seen anyone use an American graduate certificate in that way. There's also no standard abbreviation used for American graduate certificates, although I have seen GCert or GCERT in some contexts. If there's no rule against it, written or otherwise, within the context you want to use it, then no one can stop you from adding a post nominal if that's what you wanted to do.
@tuebookworm10 Your mileage may vary. It's a post-grad cert from an accredited American university. I'm sure it would be accepted as a valid credential in the UK, but how "useful" it will be depends on what you want to "use" it for. There's no precedent for what a certificate in Telehealth can do for your career since there aren't too many schools that offer them and they're all very new. As for post nominals, I can only share my own experience that I've never seen anyone use an American graduate certificate in that way. There's also no standard abbreviation used for American graduate certificates, although I have seen GCert or GCERT in some contexts. If there's no rule against it, written or otherwise, within the context you want to use it, then no one can stop you from adding a post nominal if that's what you wanted to do.
SMS, SGB, GEN, NG, TG16, NES, SNES