
Synchronous vs. Asynchronous Online Models
Teacher Education
Why how you learn matters as much as what you learn
For paraprofessionals entering teaching and new teachers racing the clock toward professional certification, choosing a synchronous master’s program isn’t just a preference — it’s a strategic advantage.
CITE — Center for Integrated Training and Education · April 2026
Teachers in New York’s classrooms are in demand. Whether you’re a paraprofessional who’s spent years supporting students and is ready to lead your own classroom, or a new teacher working toward professional (permanent) certification, one question shapes your path more than you might expect: will your master’s program be live and interactive, or self-paced and asynchronous?
The answer matters more than most program brochures let on.
Two models, two very different experiences
An asynchronous program delivers pre-recorded lectures, self-paced modules, and discussion boards you can respond to on your own time. It sounds appealing — until week four, when life gets busy and the coursework starts drifting.
A synchronous program meets in real time, with a live instructor and cohort of fellow students. You show up, you participate, you ask questions in the moment, and you leave with something an async course rarely delivers: a genuine learning community.
CITE’s master’s programs, offered in partnership with the University of Mount Saint Vincent, are fully synchronous — live, online, and scheduled on weekends and school breaks so working educators can attend without sacrificing their jobs or their students.
“The classroom isn’t just a place where content is delivered. It’s where teachers become teachers — through dialogue, feedback, and the company of peers who are going through the same thing.”
Why synchronous learning produces better teachers
Real-time feedback from instructors
Ask a question the moment you’re confused, not 48 hours later on a message board. Instructors can read the room, slow down, and adjust in ways no recorded video can.
Accountability that keeps you on track
Completion rates for self-paced online courses are notoriously low. A live class creates natural structure — you prepare because your cohort is counting on it.
A cohort of colleagues
The teachers you study alongside become your professional network, your study partners, and often your lifelong colleagues. Async programs simply can’t replicate this bond.
Teaching modeled in real time
For future teachers especially, watching an instructor manage a live class, adapt to questions, and build community is itself a masterclass in pedagogy.
Why weekends and school breaks change everything
One of the most common barriers to earning a master’s degree is the belief that you’d have to choose between your job and your education. CITE’s programs are built around your school schedule — not against it.
Classes meet on weekends and during school breaks, which means:
Keep your job and income
No need to reduce hours or take a leave. Your teaching or paraprofessional position stays intact throughout the program.
Apply learning immediately
What you learn Saturday in class, you can try on Monday in your classroom. The connection between coursework and real teaching is immediate.
Intensity without overwhelm
Weekend and break scheduling means immersive class days followed by weeks to absorb and practice — a rhythm that matches how adults actually learn.
12–18 month completion
CITE programs are structured for efficiency. Most students complete their master’s in 12–18 months, staying well within NY State’s certification windows.
A critical note for new teachers: the certification clock
If you’re currently working as a teacher under an Initial certificate, the clock is running. A synchronous, weekend-based program like CITE’s isn’t just convenient — it’s strategically designed to help you meet NY State’s requirements without disrupting your teaching career. The structure of the program keeps you progressing on a timeline that works.
For paraprofessionals: your experience is your foundation
Paraprofessionals bring something uniquely valuable to a master’s program: real classroom experience. You’ve already been in the rooms, with the students, navigating the dynamics that textbook teachers only read about. A synchronous program lets you bring that experience into live discussion, get feedback from instructors in real time, and connect it directly to the certification requirements you need to move into your own classroom.
CITE’s cohort model means you’ll be learning alongside others who share your background — other paras, career changers, and working teachers — making the classroom conversation richer and more relevant than any self-paced module.
Our Master’s Programs
General & Special Education — Early Childhood
Dual certification, Birth–Grade 2. Initial and/or Professional certification tracks.
General & Special Education — Childhood
Dual certification, Grades 1–6. Initial and/or Professional certification tracks.
TESOL
Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages. Initial and/or Professional certification tracks.
Special Education — Pre-K to Grade 12
Comprehensive preparation for students with disabilities across all grade levels.
The cost advantage: a real comparison
Master’s degrees in education in New York can vary dramatically in price. Here’s how CITE’s per-credit rate stacks up against comparable programs at universities across the state.
Other NY institutions
| Institution | Location | Per credit | 30-credit est. |
|---|---|---|---|
| CITE / Univ. of Mount Saint Vincent lowest cost | Online / NYC | $425 | $12,750 |
| SUNY Albany | Albany | $471 | $14,130 |
| University at Buffalo (SUNY) | Buffalo | $471 | $14,130 |
| Buffalo State University | Buffalo | ~$500 | ~$15,000 |
| Pace University | NYC | $1,585 | $47,550 |
| Fordham University (GSE) | NYC | $1,799 | $53,970 |
| NYU Steinhardt | NYC | $2,272 | $68,160 |
Sources: institution websites, 2024–2025 published rates. SUNY rates reflect in-state tuition per credit. 30-credit estimate is illustrative; program credit requirements vary.
Already certified? Extend your license.
If you hold an Initial or Professional certification, CITE also offers synchronous license extension courses through the Individual Pathways Program — a fast, affordable path to adding a new certification area without returning to a full degree program.
License extension courses are available in:
Special Education
Early Childhood, Childhood, and Adolescent. 4 courses × 3 credits = 12 credits total. $745/course.
Early Childhood Education
Online, synchronous. 2 courses × 3 credits. $745/course. Total extension cost: $1,490.
Childhood Education
Online, synchronous. 2 courses × 3 credits. $745/course. Total extension cost: $1,490.
TESOL
4 courses through the University of Mount Saint Vincent via Individual Evaluation Pathway. $745/course.
Each course earns 45 CTLE credits. Students must hold Initial certification and should verify eligibility with their district certification office before enrolling.
Ready to start your master’s program?
CITE’s master’s programs in teacher education are offered in partnership with the University of Mount Saint Vincent — fully synchronous, on weekends and school breaks, at New York’s lowest per-credit rate.
Looking to extend your license?
Already certified? CITE’s synchronous license extension courses let you add a new certification area through the Individual Pathways Program — online, affordable, and on your schedule.