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Enterprise Architecture (EA) Certificate
The Enterprise Architecture (EA) Certificate program builds competencies to enable agencies to meet their Clinger-Cohen Act responsibilities for “developing, maintaining, and facilitating the implementation of a sound and integrated information technology architecture.” The program provides graduate-level education
organized around seven core EA competencies announced by the federal CIO Council. EA Certificate students develop skill in both policy and technical aspects of developing, implementing, and maintaining an EA. They also are enabled to apply EA concept and processes to support strategic planning and realize organizational and process transformation.

Certificate students learn EA development approaches to achieve mission improvement and business value rapidly, aid deveopment of business cases, and implement strategies to achieve sustained interoperability.

EA Certificate graduates understand and can apply and implement a variety of approaches, methods, techniques, and work products to facilitate cross-boundary leadership, such as:

Award of the Enterprise Architecture Certificate requires successful completion of four core and three specialty courses.  The four core courses are Enterprise Architecture for Managers (ARC), Information Management Planning (IMP), Strategies for Process Improvement (PRI), and Data Management Strategies and Technologies (DMS).  ARC must be successfully completed before enrolling in PMA, GIG or FAC. Specialty courses required for award of the certificate are Planning and Managing Enterprise Architecture Programs (PMA) and either the DoD-oriented Global Information Grid Architecture (GIG) course or the civilian agency-oriented Federal Enterprise Architecture course (FAC).  As the final course in the Enterprise Architecture certificate, students complete the Enterprise Architecture Practicum (EAP), integrating knowledge and skills acquired in their prior courses through application in an organizational setting.Graphic of EA program chartThe EA Certificate Program has been designed to complement the College's other certificate programs. Each of the foundation prerequisite courses also satisfies a primary competency requirement for the Chief Information Officer Certificate. The Information Resources Management (IRM) College currently has cooperative agreements with a number of civilian universities that grant academic credit towards master's or doctoral degrees for its certificate programs. We anticipate that graduate credit will also be granted for completion of the EA Certificate.

Methodology
Most courses are taught as both five-day intensive offerings in residence at the IRM College in Washington, D.C., and in distributed learning form on the web. (All prerequisite courses are available by distributed learning.) Students undertaking IRM College courses should expect challenging graduate-level coursework. Significant research and writing or other activities are required in preparation for each course and as an element of course assessment.

Descriptions of Courses Comprising the Enterprise Architecture Certificate Program

Enterprise Architectures for Managers (ARC)
Examines EA as a management tool to facilitate implementation of strategic direction. This includes exploring the integration of EA with strategic and resource planning, information assurance, and acquisition management. It introduces the use of EA frameworks to improve the capability maturity level of the EA to meet its intended purpose. Other topics include the role of the CIO in EA management, the use of models and standards, implementation issues, and an overview of enterprise information assurance/security architecture. Strategies are also discussed for using EA to address enterprise problems such as interoperability and information sharing with the intent of improving enterprise performance of mission or business operations
Prerequisites: None

Data Management Strategies and Technologies: A Managerial Perspective (DMS)
Explores data management, data architectures and their enabling technologies as key components for improving mission effectiveness. It examines management issues such as the implementation of the data component of the EA specified by OMB. In addition, the course covers key data management strategies and their enabling information technologies, including data warehousing, electronic records management and archiving, data mining, neural networks, knowledge discovery methodologies and data quality strategies.
Prerequisites: None

Enterprise Architecture Practicum (EAP)
Engages students in the synthesis and application of the cumulative course lessons. Students will apply their learning to solve real-world EA challenges. Students will conduct research, identify critical issues, hypothesize solution strategies, develop business cases for the strategy and then present the executed strategies for an intensive case-study taken from today’s agencies.
Prerequisites: either GIG or FAC

Federal Enterprise Architecture and Advanced Concepts (FAC)
Examines issues involved in determining compliance and application of the OMB's Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA) Reference Models and OMB Circular A-130. The architecture's role in contributing to the success of the agency’s mission is examined. Topics include an assessment of techniques to leverage the EA repository to develop business-line strategic strategies; determine the critical success factors for institutionalizing governance processes; examine and interpret GAO and OMB EA management maturity frameworks; success strategies for phasing in an EA; and integrate security and privacy requirements. Other topics include the development of business cases and integration of the Information Technology (IT) portfolio budget cycle (i.e., OMB A-11), data management, and interoperability in the Information Age.
Prerequisites: ARC

Global Information Grid Architecture and Advanced Concepts (GIG)
Examines issues involved in assessing compliance with DoD's Global Information Grid (GIG) Architecture. The GIG Architecture's role in facilitating the DoD's Net- Centric Operations and Warfare (NCOW) is examined. Topics include an examination of net-centric concepts, the scope and management of the GIG Architecture; the relationship between the GIG Architecture and the NCOW Reference Model; the structure, scope, and purpose of the NCOW Reference Model; and the content and purpose of the DoD Net-Centric Data Management Strategy: Metadata Registration. Other topics are examination of actual and potential uses of the architecture including its use in the Joint Capabilities Integration and Development System (JCIDS) and developing capabilities requirements packages.
Prerequisites: ARC

Information Management Planning (IMP)
Presents an approach to planning that integrates agency strategic planning, performance planning, information management planning, and the agency budget. This course examines a comprehensive mission-driven planning framework that combines explicit and implicit planning requirements of current legislation (e.g., Government Performance and Results Act, Paperwork Reduction Act, Clinger-Cohen Act, etc) and regulations. This course uses a comprehensive framework that integrates agency strategic planning, agency IRM strategic planning, EA planning, and IT capital planning, and investment management to link investment in information resources to improved mission performance.
Prerequisites: None

Planning and Managing Enterprise Architecture Programs (PMA)
Provides practical experience in creating EA plans and products from a management perspective. Hands-on exercises implementing the DoD Architecture Framework (DoDAF) challenge managers to think critically about how to put theory into practice. These exercises involve developing an EA project plan and using tools to create and manage DoDAF architecture products. The course also explores how to use EA to analyze operational or business requirements and capabilities, identify optimal solutions, and determine transition strategies. This course builds upon the fundamentals presented in Enterprise Architectures for Managers (ARC) course.
Prerequisites: ARC

Strategies for Process Improvement (PRI)
Examines strategies, management processes, and resources for process improvement within and across federal agencies. The course contrasts discontinuous, automation-focused business process re-engineering with the expanding focus on continuous process customization and managed improvement. An executive-level perspective is provided on the tools, techniques (for example, benchmarking, quality improvement programs, activity-based costing), and technologies that enable process-centric performance improvements to achieve agency missions. The course also contrasts the industrial age function-centric enterprise with the information age process-centric enterprise and broader process-centered partnerships, coalitions, and alliances. Attention is given to the leadership challenges of initiation, collaboration, design, implementation, and portfolio project management of process-centric improvements within and across agencies.
Prerequisites: None

Students enrolled in the certificate program may take courses for Professional Development (PD); however, for courses to count toward the certificate or as a prerequisite, students must take them for credit.