Below are the key facts about graduate study in multilingual education at UMass Amherst. You can earn it at the Graduate Certificate level. Its best result is a rank of #2 out of 15 schools (Graduate Certificate level) by College Factual. Jump to any of the following sections:
College Factual ranks UMass Amherst highly for multilingual education, coming in at #3 out of 40 schools nationally.
| Ranking | Rank |
|---|---|
| Best Multilingual Education Schools | 3 of 40 |
Here is each degree level available for multilingual education at UMass Amherst, along with how many graduates complete each level annually.
| Degree Level | Annual Graduates |
|---|---|
| Graduate Certificate | 10 |
For the most recent IPEDS reporting year, University of Massachusetts-Amherst awarded 10 graduate certificate degrees in multilingual education.
UMass Amherst ranks competitively among schools offering multilingual education at the graduate certificate level. In particular it placed #2 out of 15 schools by College Factual.
| Ranking | Rank |
|---|---|
| College Major Top Ranked | 2 |
Among recent graduates, 10% of multilingual education graduate certificate degrees went to men and 90% went to women.
The majority of multilingual education graduate certificate degree graduates at UMass Amherst were Hispanic or Latino. Approximately 60% of graduates fell into this category.
The following table and chart show the ethnic background for students who recently graduated from University of Massachusetts-Amherst with a graduate certificate in multilingual education.
| Ethnic Background | Number of Students |
|---|---|
| Asian | 0 |
| Black or African American | 0 |
| Hispanic or Latino | 6 |
| White | 3 |
| Non-Resident Aliens | 0 |
| Other Races | 1 |
UMass Amherst granted 6 graduate certificate completions in multicultural education in the most recent reporting year — 83% to women and 17% to men. The largest share of these graduates were White (50%).
UMass Amherst conferred 4 graduate certificate degrees in bilingual and multilingual education in the most recent reporting year — 100% to women and 0% to men. The largest share of these graduates were Hispanic or Latino (100%).