Course Approval Flowchart: Streamlining Academic Curriculum Decisions
Create a course approval flowchart for your academic institution. Covers proposal submission, committee review, governance approval, and catalog integration for new and modified courses.
Adding or modifying courses at academic institutions involves multiple stakeholders, committees, and approval layers. Without a clear process, proposals stall, deadlines pass, and faculty frustration builds. A well-designed course approval flowchart brings transparency and efficiency to curriculum governance.
This guide covers the essential elements of course approval workflows for universities, colleges, and training organizations.
Why course approval needs a flowchart
Academic governance is deliberately deliberate. Multiple perspectives ensure curriculum quality. But without documented processes:
Proposals get lost. Faculty submit course proposals that disappear into committee backlogs. No one knows the status.
Timelines slip. A course planned for fall semester misses the catalog deadline because one committee didn't meet.
Requirements vary. Different departments interpret approval requirements differently. Some proposals are over-documented; others lack essential information.
New faculty struggle. Tenure-track faculty need to develop new courses but don't understand the approval maze.
Governance burden grows. Committee members review proposals without clear criteria, spending time on issues that should be resolved earlier.
A flowchart makes the path visible. Faculty know what's required. Committees know their role. Administration can track progress.
Types of course actions
Different actions require different approval paths:
New course proposals
Creating a course that doesn't exist:
- New course number assigned
- Full documentation required
- All governance levels typically involved
- Catalog description created
Course modifications
Changing an existing course:
- Minor: Title, description, prerequisites—may require limited approval
- Major: Credit hours, learning outcomes, delivery mode—fuller review needed
Course deletions
Removing a course from the catalog:
- Impact analysis required
- Affects programs requiring the course
- May require teach-out plan
Experimental/pilot courses
Temporary courses for testing:
- Simplified approval path
- Limited offering period
- Pathway to permanent status
Cross-listed courses
Courses offered under multiple departments:
- Coordination between departments
- Single course, multiple prefixes
- Resource sharing agreements
Core stages of course approval
Proposal development
Faculty prepare the course proposal:
Required elements typically include:
- Course title and description
- Credit hours and contact hours
- Learning outcomes/objectives
- Prerequisite requirements
- Assessment methods
- Required resources (lab, equipment, etc.)
- Syllabus or detailed outline
- Justification/rationale
Supporting documentation:
- Library resource assessment
- Similar course comparison
- Enrollment projections
- Staffing plan
- Budget implications
Department review
First level of academic review:
Department curriculum committee:
- Reviews academic content
- Checks alignment with program goals
- Identifies resource implications
- Recommends modifications
Department chair/head:
- Approves resource commitment
- Confirms staffing feasibility
- Signs off on proposal
Decision point:
Department review → Approved?
├─ Yes → Forward to college level
├─ Revisions needed → Return to faculty
└─ Rejected → Document reasons, end process
College/School review
Broader academic perspective:
College curriculum committee:
- Cross-department impact assessment
- Duplication check with other programs
- Alignment with college strategic plan
- General education fit (if applicable)
Dean review:
- Resource allocation approval
- Strategic alignment confirmation
- Forward recommendation
University/Institution review
Final academic governance:
Undergraduate/Graduate council:
- University-wide curriculum consistency
- Credit hour policy compliance
- Accreditation requirement alignment
- General education requirements (if applicable)
Faculty senate/Academic council:
- Final faculty governance approval
- Major policy considerations
- Cross-institutional implications
Administrative processing
After academic approval:
Registrar's office:
- Course number assignment
- Catalog integration
- System setup (SIS entry)
- Schedule of classes entry
Other offices (as applicable):
- Financial aid (credit hour verification)
- Assessment office (outcome mapping)
- Accreditation liaison (compliance check)
Board approval (if required)
Some institutions require:
- New program approval
- Significant resource commitments
- Degree requirement changes
Decision points in the workflow
Is this a new course or modification?
Submission received → New course?
├─ Yes → Full proposal path
└─ No → Modification level?
├─ Minor → Abbreviated review
└─ Major → Standard review path
Does this affect general education?
Course review → Gen Ed component?
├─ Yes → Gen Ed committee review → Approve?
│ ├─ Yes → Continue standard path
│ └─ No → Revision required
└─ No → Continue standard path
Are resources available?
Department review → Resources needed?
├─ New faculty line → Provost approval required
├─ New equipment → Capital budget review
├─ New space → Facilities review
└─ Existing resources → Standard path
Does this impact other programs?
College review → Cross-department impact?
├─ Yes → Affected department consultation → Agreement?
│ ├─ Yes → Continue
│ └─ No → Mediation process
└─ No → Continue standard path
Timeline considerations
Course approval has calendar constraints:
Backward planning from offering
If targeting Fall 2026 offering:
| Milestone | Deadline |
|---|---|
| Catalog publication | March 2026 |
| Registrar processing | February 2026 |
| Faculty Senate | January 2026 |
| College committee | November 2025 |
| Department approval | October 2025 |
| Proposal development | September 2025 |
Build your flowchart with deadline checkpoints.
Meeting schedules
Committees meet on fixed schedules:
- Monthly during academic year
- May not meet in summer
- Submission deadlines before meetings
Missing one meeting can delay approval by a month or more.
Catalog cycles
Most institutions have annual catalog deadlines:
- Miss the deadline → wait a full year
- Some allow mid-year additions with restrictions
Common approval patterns
Sequential approval
Faculty → Department → College → University → Registrar
Simple but slow. Each level waits for the previous.
Parallel review (where appropriate)
Faculty → Department → ┬→ College curriculum
└→ Gen Ed committee (if applicable)
↓
Merge and continue
Faster when independent reviews can happen simultaneously.
Expedited path
Faculty → Department chair → Dean → Registrar
For minor modifications or experimental courses. Skips full committee review.
Conditional approval
Committee review → Approve with conditions →
Faculty revision → Chair verification → Continue
Allows progress while addressing minor issues.
Roles and responsibilities
Faculty/Proposer
- Develops complete proposal
- Responds to revision requests
- Presents to committees (if required)
- Addresses feedback at each level
Department curriculum committee
- First academic review
- Content expertise
- Program fit assessment
- Detailed feedback
Department chair
- Resource commitment
- Staffing confirmation
- Priority among department proposals
College curriculum committee
- Cross-department perspective
- Duplication prevention
- College-wide standards
Dean
- Resource allocation authority
- Strategic alignment
- Forward or return decision
University curriculum committee
- Institution-wide perspective
- Policy compliance
- Accreditation alignment
Registrar
- Technical processing
- Catalog integration
- System configuration
Integration with systems
Curriculum management systems
Modern institutions use software for workflow:
- Curriculog, CourseLeaf, Kuali
- Automated routing
- Status tracking
- Document management
- Approval workflows
Your flowchart should align with system configuration.
Student information systems
After approval:
- Course created in SIS (Banner, PeopleSoft, etc.)
- Available for scheduling
- Open for registration
Learning management systems
Course shells created:
- Syllabus templates
- Learning outcome mapping
- Assessment integration
Common problems and solutions
Problem: Proposals sit without action
Cause: No tracking, committee overload Solution: Status dashboard, submission deadlines, expedited paths for minor changes
Problem: Repeated revision requests
Cause: Unclear requirements, incomplete proposals Solution: Proposal checklist, pre-submission review, templates
Problem: Committees duplicate effort
Cause: Unclear committee scope Solution: Define each committee's focus in flowchart, standardize forms
Problem: Faculty avoid the process
Cause: Too complex, too slow, uncertain outcome Solution: Simplify for minor changes, provide timeline guarantees, offer support
Problem: Last-minute submissions
Cause: Deadlines unclear, no consequences Solution: Published calendar, no exceptions policy, multi-year planning
Metrics for curriculum governance
Track process performance:
Volume metrics
- Proposals submitted per term
- Proposals by type (new, modification, deletion)
- Proposals by department
Timing metrics
- Average time at each approval level
- Total cycle time (submission to catalog)
- Proposals missing catalog deadline
Quality metrics
- Proposals returned for revision
- Revision cycles before approval
- Proposals rejected (and reasons)
Workload metrics
- Proposals per committee
- Committee meeting frequency
- Member time commitment
Building your course approval flowchart
Curriculum governance processes are often documented in faculty handbooks and committee charters. Use Flowova to create a visual workflow:
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Gather governance documents: Faculty handbook, committee charters, catalog policies.
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Interview key stakeholders: Department chairs, committee chairs, registrar, faculty who've navigated the process.
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Map the happy path: Standard new course from proposal to catalog.
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Add decision points: Where does the process branch? What triggers escalation?
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Include timelines: Deadline constraints, meeting schedules, catalog cycles.
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Validate with governance: Review with curriculum committee chairs. Does the flowchart match practice?
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Publish and communicate: Make the flowchart available to faculty. Include on curriculum proposal forms.
The goal is a flowchart that demystifies curriculum governance—helping faculty navigate the process and committees understand their role.
Related resources
- Employee Onboarding Flowchart – Onboarding new staff
- Change Management Flowchart – Managing organizational change
- Editorial Content Review – Content approval workflows
- How to Make a Flowchart – Flowchart basics