In the Certificate in Producing for Film Program, students develop the skills to pursue a career as a film producer. At the completion of the program, students have the tools and hands-on experience to both produce films and a skill-set that is directly applicable to other career paths, including new and emerging media, internet and digital media production and distribution, documentary production, video games, commercials, as well as business opportunities and start-up and entrepreneurial ventures in areas that may both include or even transcend the world of filmmaking. The program focuses on the entire producing process from development to distribution, and creating a Producing portfolio project. Courses are centered on project development, business planning, and production management.
Financial information
Total tuition
$0.00
Total required fees
$0.00
Books and supplies
$0.00
Locations
Seattle,
Online
Instructional methods
In-person Primary Location
Is this program offered on evenings and weekends?
No
Additional details
Award name
MFA
Education Prerequisites
None
Prerequisite courses and other requirements
Admission requires a bachelors degree from an accredited college or university with at least a 2.0 (on a 4.00 scale) grade point average.
Is this program approved to train veterans?
No
Program languages
English
Certification/license obtained as part of training program
N/A
Certification/license test preparation provided
Employment performance results
Data is unavailable for one of several reasons: In some cases, the institution has not provided the Workforce Board with data to independently evaluate program performance. We encourage all schools to provide this data on an annual basis. In other cases, the program joined Career Bridge recently and student data has not been reported yet. In other cases, the program is too small or too new to provide reliable results.
Top industries for graduates
Data is unavailable for one of several reasons: In some cases, the institution has not provided the Workforce Board with data to independently evaluate program performance. We encourage all schools to provide this data on an annual basis. In other cases, the program joined Career Bridge recently and student data has not been reported yet. In other cases, the program is too small or too new to provide reliable results.
Data is unavailable for one of several reasons: In some cases, the institution has not provided the Workforce Board with data to independently evaluate program performance. We encourage all schools to provide this data on an annual basis. In other cases, the program joined Career Bridge recently and student data has not been reported yet. In other cases, the program is too small or too new to provide reliable results.