We’ve pulled together the essential facts you should know about graduate study in multilingual education at Brooklyn. You can earn it at the Graduate Certificate level. Its best result is a rank of #5 out of 8 schools (Graduate Certificate level) by College Factual. Jump to any of the following sections:
College Factual ranks Brooklyn among the top schools in the country for multilingual education, placing at #18 out of 40 schools nationally.
| Ranking | Rank |
|---|---|
| Best Multilingual Education Schools | 18 of 40 |
| Best Multilingual Education Schools in New York | 7 of 10 |
| Best Multilingual Education Schools in the Middle Atlantic Region | 10 of 14 |
Here is each degree level offered in multilingual education at Brooklyn, along with how many graduates complete each level annually.
| Degree Level | Annual Graduates |
|---|---|
| Graduate Certificate | 10 |
For the most recent IPEDS reporting year, CUNY Brooklyn College handed out 10 graduate certificate degrees in multilingual education.
Brooklyn ranks competitively among schools offering multilingual education at the graduate certificate level. In particular it placed #5 out of 8 schools by College Factual.
| Ranking | Rank |
|---|---|
| College Major Top Ranked | 5 |
| College Major Top Ranked | 7 |
| College Major Top Ranked | 10 |
Among recent graduates, 20% of multilingual education graduate certificate degrees went to men and 80% went to women.
The majority of multilingual education graduate certificate degree graduates at Brooklyn were Hispanic or Latino. About 70% of graduates fell into this category.
The following table and chart show the ethnic background for students who recently graduated from CUNY Brooklyn College with a graduate certificate in multilingual education.
| Ethnic Background | Number of Students |
|---|---|
| Asian | 1 |
| Black or African American | 1 |
| Hispanic or Latino | 7 |
| White | 0 |
| Non-Resident Aliens | 1 |
| Other Races | 0 |
Brooklyn awarded 10 graduate certificate completions in bilingual and multilingual education recently — 80% to women and 20% to men. The largest share of these graduates were Hispanic or Latino (70%).