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DeVry Tech Core overhaul aimed at careers in IoT

By DeVry University

3 min read

Do you “like working with computers,” but aren’t sure where your tech-related strengths, talents, and passions fit into the technology industry at large?

The omnipresence of the Internet of Things (IoT) in today’s technological landscape has inspired a recent realignment of our tech curriculum into 3 areas: Engineering Technology, Information Technology and Software and Information Systems.

The realignment also includes a new learning path, our Undecided Option. It’s basically a chance to get your feet wet and plan a viable career path while learning skills you’ll need across multiple tech-related fields.

Undecided? Not a problem

In our Undecided Option you can choose a specialty after earning 30 academic credits, in the meantime focusing on building skills in operating systems, programming, hardware, connectivity, and security. The degree provides a specialized foundation of knowledge useful on its own, or as the launch of your academic aspirations.

Tech Core acts as a conduit toward undergraduate and advanced degrees. The end result: Students working to gain the knowledge they need in careers related to some of the most important tech innovations of the day. Some of these include big data, cloud storage, mobile technology, the latest digital devices (from smartphones to Fitbits), and more.

An academic overhaul

Our Undecided Option is just one aspect of more sweeping changes, though. Students’ expectations are changing, says the leader of the curriculum revamp effort, William Phillips, Ph.D., DeVry’s associate national dean of Engineering & Information Sciences, Health Sciences, and Media Arts & Technology.

Phillips and his team set out to modularize our credential offerings, making them industry pertinent and stackable. “In the past, students just took a bunch of courses and educators hoped synthesis would occur,” Phillips says. “Now, it’s important to point out exactly what you’re trying to get the student to understand.”

This included making some courses standard across the curriculum so that you can gain fundamental knowledge critical to your field and use the credits earned toward a degree in as flexible a manner as possible. The new and revised courses are also offered both on campus and online, or a hybrid of the two.1

In revamping our curriculum, special emphasis and work was put into the actual content you’re presented by faculty, who are embracing their role as curators of their own educational content in the digital age. “It’s a digital media experience whether a student is online or on campus,” Phillips says. “You’re probably going to get left behind if not approaching your curriculum [and classes] in that fashion.”

As far as the coursework itself, “We’re rewriting the courses to give the students exactly what they need that’s relevant to their career path—less side topics, more so what they need to do the work.”

Introducing tech core

After 9 months of effort, Phillips was excited to introduce students to the new curriculum. “The graduating classes of today and tomorrow want to know the rigor is there,” he says. “They’re the ones spending the money and want to know what’s under the hood: specifically, what they’re learning, why they’re learning it, and what it’s going to do for them.

“Relevant rigor,” Phillips calls it. “They want to know you’ve done the work so that they can learn and build a career for themselves.”

Start exploring our tech degree programs today or request info to learn more.

Level up in tech with career-focused education

Future-proof your career with job-relevant skills at DeVry.

1Program, course, and extended classroom availability vary by location. In site-based programs, students will be required to take a substantial amount of coursework online to complete their program.

Classes start on May 4, 2026

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