UTSA's fully online, self-supporting programs serve a distinct student population that may not pursue or continue their education if not for the option to complete the program 100% online.
Student fees are embedded in the student credit hour rate charged and will be distributed to service areas according to the financial model outlined in each program Memorandum of Understanding (MOU).Fully online, self-supporting degree program students are provided the same level of student fee service and support as traditional/residential students. These rates are evaluated and updated annually and are subject to change. To see rates for full- and part-time students during AY2024-25, click here.
The UTSA Office of Online Programs offers tailored faculty support, administrative processes, and course design services specifically for UTSA Online courses. UTSA Online’s academic programs meet the same standards and requirements as UTSA’s residential and hybrid programs, ensuring quality and compliance with university and external guidelines.
The funding model for fully online, self-supporting programs aligns with the Incentivized Resource Management budget model and uses a different financial formula for revenue and expense distribution than programs eligible for state formula funding.
UTSA Academic Innovation's Office of Online Programs provides necessary financial support for three years to encourage colleges to create online programs and minimize any initial financial barriers. After that period, as the program generates revenue, it becomes fully supported by the college. After the first three years of the initial investment period and the program is fully-launched and sustained, faculty can work with their respective Dean to plan for the continuation of their fully online, self-supporting program.
Read the template memorandum of understanding to learn more.
The Office of Online Programs has found that fully online students are most successful when taking eight-week, fully asynchronous classes. However, a program may require a synchronous course that is offered outside of a traditional Monday-Friday workweek schedule. By working with the Office of Online Programs, you can find a class schedule and solution that helps your students succeed.
Planning goals:
Planning process:
New fully online, self-supporting program analysis process
Analysis goals:
Analysis process:
If the program does not proceed to being a fully online, self-supporting program, the college may still decide to enhance the program's major coursework with Teaching, Learning & Digital Transformation and provide it to hybrid and/or on-campus students in an online modality.
The Office of Online Programs collaborates with the proposal sponsor to ensure that the approved program completes the release requirements. The program initiator must follow all program creation requirements in Courseleaf to ensure all UTSA Departmental, College, Academic Affairs and external requirements are completed.
The Office of Online Programs helps faculty connect with Academic Innovation’s Office of Teaching, Learning & Digital Transformation (TLDT), which helps faculty ensure their course is designed for students in a fully online modality. TLDT's comprehensive assistance helps instructors develop classes accessible to all students, meet quality standards (Quality Matters and OLC Scorecard), and employ the latest best practices in universal design. Together, Online Programs and TLDT provide professional development, instruction, course development and refresh, assistance with the Courseleaf process, grading, facilitation, programming and more.
The Office of Online Programs works collaboratively with UTSA Enrollment Marketing to promote fully online, self-supporting programs. Fully online, self-supporting programs appear on the UTSA Online website, are linked to UTSA’s other program pages, and are marketed directly to targeted audiences.
Prospective students complete a Request for Information form (RFI) on the UTSA Online or Future Roadrunner websites and are moved through a seamless handoff to the Online Programs staff. From there, advisors in the Office of Online Programs help students explore how to achieve their educational goals. The office provides its faculty and college partners with transparent and consistent reporting on interested and enrolled students.
UTSA’s Office of Online Programs has created a program that is tailored to compete with other national fully online higher education programs. The office supports fully online students from the moment they first investigate and show interest about a UTSA degree program, through the enrollment process and orientation. This white glove, agile customer service experience ensures that UTSA does not lose potential students to competitors in the online education marketplace.
UTSA fully online students have all the academic support available to those in a traditional classroom setting, including student success support resources, innovative technology, and access to UTSA’s broader community. To learn more about student support services, visit the UTSA Online website.
Fully online students may join courses that are cross-listed in order to allow them to complete core classes at UTSA without having to create a new online-only section. Learn more about cross-listing courses.
Academic Innovation's Offices of Online Programs and Teaching, Learning & Digital Transformation (TLDT) provide a variety of services to help instructors build courses specifically for a fully online modality. Additionally, the team helps faculty meet UTSA’s residential quality standards as well as navigate approval processes in Courseleaf.
TLDT helps instructors develop courses that are accessible to all students, meet quality standards (Quality Matters and OLC Scorecard), and employ the latest best practices in universal design. Online Programs and TLDT provide professional development, instruction, course development and refresh, assistance with the Courseleaf process, grading, facilitation, programming and more.
These services for faculty are paid for by the Office of Online Programs.
Once a program launches, the Office of Online Programs ensures its college partners are kept up-to-date on enrollment and prospective students. Here’s a snapshot of what you’ll see in the weekly report once you bring your program online.
In addition, the Office of Online Programs continues to consult with program initiators about enrollment, marketing, pricing, competitors and other areas where we can provide additional expert information and advice.