Master of Public Administration (MPA)

NASPAA Logo - School of Public Affairs

The master’s degree program in Public Administration (MPA) at the University of New Mexico was established in 1969 and is accredited by the Network of Schools of Public Policy, Affairs, and Administration (NASPAA). The program is proud to serve a highly diverse student body. The School of Public Administration has the highest percentage of minority students of any graduate degree program at the University of New Mexico.

Mission Statement

The MPA program prepares students to enter leadership and management positions and advance their positions in federal, state, local, tribal, nonprofit, and international agencies. Students acquire critical knowledge and skills to help them address ethical, equity, and managerial challenges in a complex and diverse world.

Course Formats

To accommodate mid-career professionals, all of our classes are offered in the evening and on Saturdays face-to-face with some online options.

Program Outcomes

  Enrollment and Graduation

 

  Number of students initially enrolled in ARY-5

67

  Graduating within 2 years

14

  Graduating within stated time of degree (3 years)

34

  Graduating within 4 years

39

  Graduating greater than 4 years

58

The data reported represent students who initially enrolled in the
MPA program during AY 2017-2018.

Time to degree

The MPA program is 42 credit hours required, and the definition of full-time graduate enrollment is 9 or more credit hours per semester. As data shows, students that complete the program as full-time graduate students are extremely rare. Our students are usually employed and the majority work full-time, so they take fewer credit hours per semester than would pre-service students (although the profile of our student body has been gradually shifting to include more pre-service students than in-service students). The recommended pace of steady progress is designed to lead to program completion in three years of part-time study.

   Employment and Job Placement

AY 2022-2023

National or central government in the same country the program

5

State, provincial, or regional government in the country as the program

7

City, county, or other local government in the country as the program

3

Government not in the same country as the program (all levels) or international quasi-govermental

0

Nonprofit domestically-oriented

12

Nonprofit.NGOs Internationally-oriented

0

Private sector - research/consulting

0

Private sector but not research/consulting

5

Obtaining further education

0

Military Service

0

Unemployed (not seeking employment)

1

Unempolyed (seeking employment)

0

Status unknown

2

Total 

35

The data represent students employed in "profession" within 6 months of
graduation (AY 2022-2023).  

Learning Assurance Plan

The School is accredited and adheres to the standards of the Network of Schools of Public Policy, Affairs, and Administration (NASPAA) Commission on Peer Review and Accreditation (COPRA). The standards include the following goals for student learning:

NASPAA Standard 5.1 Universal Required Competencies

As the basis for its curriculum, the program will adopt a set of required competencies related to its mission and public service values.
The required competencies will include five domains: the ability...

  1. to lead and manage in public governance;
  2. to participate in and contribute to the policy process;
  3. to analyze, synthesize, think critically, solve problems and make decisions;
  4. to articulate and apply a public service perspective;
  5. to communicate and interact productively with a diverse and changing workforce and citizenry.

To achieve competency in each of these five domains, the School specifies six hierarchical categories and 22 components of Student Learning Outcomes (SLO).

UNM MPA Student Learning Outcomes and Associated NASPAA Domains

  1. MPA graduates will demonstrate knowledge of...
    • Organizational behavior (NASPAA 1)
    • Human resource management (NASPAA 1)
    • Public budgeting and financial management (NASPAA 1)
    • Strategic planning and strategic management (NASPAA 1)
    • Program evaluation and performance measurement (NASPAA 1 & 2)
    • Comparative and case analysis (NASPAA 3)
    • Information and network management (NASPAA 3)
  2. MPA graduates will demonstrate the ability to identify...
    • Organizational challenges (NASPAA 3 & 4)
  3. MPA graduates will analyze policies and programs by applying appropriate...
    • Information technology and data management tools (NASPAA 3)
    • Quantitative and/or qualitative analysis methods (NASPAA 3)
    • Ethical research standards (NASPAA 4 & 5)
  4. MPA graduates will appropriately and effectively apply...
    • Management theory and organizational analysis (NASPAA 1 & 3)
  5. MPA graduates will demonstrate a nuanced understanding of...
    • Public, private, and non-profit sector interactions (NASPAA 4)
    • Managing diversity in the global environment (NASPAA 5)
  6. MPA graduates will demonstrate excellent...
    • Verbal communication ability (NASPAA 4 & 5)
    • Written (expository and analytical) communication ability (NASPAA 4 & 5)
Competencies are learned through face-to-face and distance delivery courses, internships, guided studies, and capstone projects or theses. Additional learning takes place through extra-curricular and supplemental activities such as lectures, clubs, Graduate Resource Center (GRC) tutoring and classes, and similar use of university and community resources.

Methods of SLO Assessment

Direct measures for each SLO component are obtained from embedded core course assessments and associated scoring conventions and from the standardized thesis or capstone project scoring matrix.
The performance target for the current three year period is for 75% of students to achieve satisfactory (basic competence) or better performance on each SLO. Student performance in each required course is sampled one time per year, in either Fall or Spring semester.

Additional Learning Assessment Methods and Measures

Indirect information regarding the achievement of the program’s learning outcomes is obtained using the following measures and methods:

Measures:

  1. Employment of graduates
    • At entry to program
    • At graduation
    • Three years after graduation
  2. Time to degree
    • % graduating within three years of first enrollment
    • % graduating within four years % graduating within seven years
  3. Perceptions/opinions of curriculum and instruction quality as effective preparation for the knowledge, skills, responsibilities, and values required for students’ employment
  4. Perceptions/opinions of improvements needed

Methods:

  1. Enrollment data review
  2. Course record review (grading patterns, enrollment, completion rates)
  3. Student evaluations of courses, per university mandate
  4. Annual faculty meeting devoted to learning outcomes review
  5. Other faculty meeting discussions
  6. Annual consultation with Advisory Board or similar community focus group
  7. Tri-annual surveys of current students, alumni and employers
  8. Student exit surveys each semester
  9. Annual faculty performance reviews
    • Peer evaluations of teaching
    • Self-reflection on teaching
Each Fall semester, a dedicated faculty meeting is held to review assessment data collected in the previous academic year. The faculty may elect to make immediate changes if they identify opportunities for improvement that can be implemented right away or propose larger strategic initiatives that can be elaborated in subsequent semesters. In addition, the SPA Curriculum Committee uses the assessment information in its on-going review and improvement of the curriculum.

Contact

Rachel Torano-Mark
Graduate Advisement
spadvise@unm.edu / rtoranomark@unm.edu 
(505) 277-1095