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PGWP program eligibility
International students interested in applying for a post-graduate work permit (PGWP) to work in Canada following graduation must review program eligibility requirements. Only some programs are eligible. 

Funeral Arranging and Directing

Develop the essential skills you need to serve clients and families, while apprenticing as a funeral director.

A funeral director stands in a suit in front of a funeral home.
Adam Tipert is an NSCC graduate and owner of Sweeny's Funeral Home in Bridgewater.
Start Date(s):
September 2025
Typical Length:
2 Years
Credential:
Certificate

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Apprenticeship required for admissions 

This program is for individuals already employed in the funeral services sector and who have an apprenticeship secured. As this program is offered every other year, you are encouraged to apply early. If you are interested in this field of study but don't have an apprenticeship, it’s recommended you complete an observation with a funeral services provider. Learn more about the observation process

Overview

In this certificate program, you learn how to:
  • Design services that are meaningful for the bereaved and reflective of the life of the deceased
  • Meet the needs of client families by arranging and directing funeral and related services
  • Secure documents required to legally transport, bury and cremate the deceased
  • Provide pre-need, at-need and aftercare services
  • Follow federal and provincial legislation requirements for transportation and final disposition
  • Meet the provincial apprenticeship requirements for licensing as a Funeral Director
This online learning and apprenticeship like program is for funeral director apprentices in Atlantic Canada who are registered with their provincial licensing Board of Registration of Embalmers and Funeral Directors. This certificate is only available to students apprenticing in Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador, where funeral directors and embalmers are licensed separately.

Clinical placement

  • This entire program is delivered while you apprentice.
  • It includes multiple applied learning courses (see courses tab) that provide you with the opportunity to integrate theory with your work practice and the everyday challenges of your work environment.
  • Most evaluation in this program is based on evidence of your performance during your apprenticeship, rather than tests or examinations.

Choose NSCC

  • Benefit from our faculty's deep knowledge of the funeral sector, as well as flexible learning options.
  • Gain skills that are relevant to industry. We maintain close connections with Atlantic Canada's funeral service providers, developing programs that respond to the changes in the provision of funeral services and the demands of the profession.

Other info

  • This program is part-time with courses delivered online over a two-year period.
  • This program is not offered each year. Check program locations for upcoming start dates.
  • The apprenticeship requirements for students enrolled in the Funeral Arranging and Directing program vary from province-to-province. Generally, a licensing examination(s) is required. Licensing examinations may include both a written examination and a practical examination. For more information on provincial licensing requirements, contact your respective Board of Registration of Embalmers and Funeral Directors.

September 2025

Campus Full time/part time Delivery Availability
eCampus
Part time Asynchronous online
Delivered fully online with no scheduled classes.
Seats available

Admission requirements

  • High School Graduation Diploma or equivalent
    • This program is open to applicants from Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador provinces.
  • A valid Nova Scotia Class 5 driver's licence or equivalent
  • A letter from the funeral home where you are currently employed stating you have secured an apprenticeship with them.

Program requirements

  • At program start, provide proof of application of registration for apprenticeship or the apprenticeship license if already issued from the specific provincial licensing board for embalmers and funeral directors where you will be completing your apprenticeship.
  • Check with the specific provincial licensing board where you will be completing your apprenticeship for application deadlines.
  • A current, official criminal record check and vulnerable sector check are required to complete work placements in many programs. A conviction may impact your ability to complete program requirements.
  • All programs in Health and Human Services require First Aid/CPR as a graduation requirement. For specific program requirements, view additional Health and Human Services program requirements
  • Many Health and Human Services programs have additional requirements, including immunizations. You must submit proof that you've completed these requirements by the date provided to you at the beginning of your program. View additional Health and Human Services program requirements
    • Receiving immunizations may take up to 10 months to complete.
    • Failure to complete immunizations can result in a delayed work placement, which will impact your ability to complete program and graduation requirements.
  • Portfolio development – As part of your studies at NSCC, you develop a portfolio of your work; the portfolio captures your achievements and profiles your skills to employers.

Tuition

Tuition amounts are for the 2024-25 academic year. Program costs and fees (textbooks, supplies, etc.) are additional.

Tuition (Domestic):
$3,346

Tuition, fees and program costs

This program is not eligible for a Nova Scotia Student Loan.

Tuition for part-time study option is calculated on a per-course basis and is paid at the beginning of each term.

In addition to annual tuition, there are program costs (books, tools, etc.) and student fees for College services, health and dental plans, your student association and parking.

View detailed program fees page(s). Please note that amounts on these pages are meant for planning purposes only. They don't represent final amounts owing.

Career options

  • Most graduates choose to work as funeral directors, but employment options are numerous. Graduates may be employed as pre-arrangement counsellors, crematoria operators or as representatives for a variety of funeral trade suppliers, including funeral stationery suppliers, monument and casket manufacturers and memorial options.
  • You may also work in the following services: pre-arrangement and at-need services, cremation services, funeral procedures, burial and memorial services, aftercare and bereavement.

Courses may include

These are some of the courses offered in this program. It is not a complete list and courses are subject to change in advance of the academic year.

Recognizing prior learning / transfer credits
If you have previous learning (course, employment, etc...) that's relevant to your program, you may be able to apply to earn credit. Not all programs are eligible. Learn about our recognizing prior learning (RPL) process.

FUSV 1001 - Funeral Service Law and Ethics
The purpose of this course is to study the areas of mortuary law and funeral service ethics as it applies to the funeral sector professionals, business operations, and professional services. Students will examine provincial legislation. licensing board policies and code of professional conduct for the province where they are apprenticing. Licensing requirements and minimum standards for the operation of funeral homes and crematoria will be reviewed as well. Ethical and legal considerations for the care and custody of the patient, transfers, chain of custody protocol, death registration, authorizations, and disclosures, and arranging for various modes of disposition (e.g. Transfers, cremation, burial, donation) in Atlantic Canada will be explored.

FUSV 1002 - Psychosocial Aspects of Death and Dying
In this course students are introduced to current issues, concepts, and research in the study of bio-psycho-social- spiritual aspects of death, dying and bereavement. By examining the significance of end-of-life experiences, students will examine the idea that how we live influences how we die. Students will also examine the importance of practicing cultural humility at end-of-life including respect and support for end-of-life decisions about care, treatment, and comfort, dimensions of care, experiences of grief and bereavement, as well as a family/ community-centred lens for supporting expected, unexpected and traumatic deaths. Students will also reflect on their own mortality, personal values, meaning of life and death and how these impact personal and professional behaviours.

FUSV 1008 - Contemporary Rites and Rituals
In this course, students will explore contemporary secular and religious rites, rituals, and ceremonies. Judeo-Christian religious rites and rituals will be the focus in this course. We’ll discuss traditional religious funeral practices relative to our experiences with contemporary religious and secular funeral practices within the Atlantic Canadian context. We are witnessing a shift in religious practices and identities in our communities. As a result of this shift, the patterned, ritual ways in which we act out our emotions, bring meaning and connections to our lives, and to make sense of a loss, is changing. Students will explore opportunities to offer something different than the traditional funeral so that they can create meaningful experiences for the family and community of mourners.

FUSV 1270 - Funeral Arranging and Directing Applied Learning Practicum I
Funeral Arranging and Directing program students at NSCC increase their theoretical knowledge base and develop essential skills while apprenticing as funeral directors. All three applied learning practicum courses are designed to capture the application of theory in the funeral home setting and through engagements with the community. As the theory courses provide the foundation for the applied learning, it is expected that students will continue with their online theory courses while completing each applied learning practicum course. Documented participation in funeral procedures including transfers, preparation of documentation required for all forms of disposition, funeral arrangement conferences, pre-arrangements, set-up for funerals, tribute services, visitations and committals, directing funerals, memorial services, and committal services and all tasks as requested by the licensed mentor necessary in the provision of funeral services to client families.

FUSV 2000 - World Religions: Western Traditions
Looking beyond Judeo-Christian religious practices, a selection of the major world religions and spiritual philosophies will be explored during this course. We’ll be looking at the world religions students will most likely encounter in their work in Atlantic Canada such as Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, Baha’i Faith and Indigenous spiritual traditions. The evolution of funeral practices across these cultures is studied to broaden understanding of the significance of specific religious rites and rituals within the contemporary Atlantic Canadian context. Students will consider their own role in fulfilling services, religious beliefs to keep in mind, what timelines will look like for transfers, arrangements and disposition, the questions they will need to ask during arrangement conferences to meet the needs of individuals and families, as well as special considerations for preparation and disposition. Through course learning activities, students will apply knowledge of the world religions covered in this course to meet the needs of families.

FUSV 2001 - Legal Aspects of Death: Advanced Planning and Aftercare
The course topics include pre-arranged services and a review of pre-need legislation in Atlantic Canada, death benefits, advance planning considerations and client aftercare. Application and awareness of provincial legislation as it applies to prearranged funerals is important to funeral professionals. A review of the legislation specific to the sale of prearranged funeral plans for each province in Atlantic Canada will be our focus. Students will have the opportunity to review legal terms that apply to estate planning and end of life care; and discuss important decisions that must be considered to ensure one’s wishes are known and carried out. Knowledge of available death benefits is essential in meeting the needs of client families when arranging services and providing client aftercare.

FUSV 2002 - Issues in Grief and Bereavement for Funeral Service
Funeral and Allied Health professionals are important stakeholders in integrated care who provide individuals, families, and communities support in dying, death and grief. Whether it is before a death, during the process of dying or after a death has occurred; grief is core to the experience. North America has been critiqued for being a grief-denying society, which can impact the role the funeral professional provides. Beyond the care of the deceased, funeral professional must also support the bereaved. Self-awareness, knowledge, and strategies matter greatly to the bereaved; as well as how they are delivered. Students will explore current research on grief and loss, through a person-centred, family-centred, and community-centred lens. Through discussions of complex legal, moral, and ethical issues on grief and loss, and practice critical self-reflection, students will consider their own biases and judgments core to their own professional practice.

FUSV 2100 - Funeral Service Business Practices
This course provides students with an introductory level understanding of funeral service business practices. Students explore best practices and strategies to create welcoming and inclusive funeral homes, sensitive to the needs of client families. Communicating with client families beginning with the first call, transfers from home, arrangement conferences, explanation of service options, merchandise selection and pricing, funeral and related services are discussed. Through course learning activities, students will apply knowledge of funeral merchandise, disposition options and requirements, third party services, contemporary trends, legislation, and ethical considerations to manage expectations of consumers and handle challenging situations.

FUSV 2180 - Funeral Arranging and Directing Applied Learning Practicum II
Funeral Arranging and Directing program students at NSCC increase their theoretical knowledge base and develop essential skills while apprenticing as funeral directors. All three applied learning practicum courses are designed to capture the application of theory in the funeral home setting and through engagements with the community. As the theory courses provide the foundation for the applied learning, it is expected that students will continue with their online theory courses while completing each applied learning practicum course. Documented participation in funeral procedures including transfers, preparation of documentation required for all forms of disposition, funeral arrangement conferences, pre-arrangements, set-up for funerals, tribute services, visitations and committals, directing funerals, memorial services, and committal services and all tasks as requested by the licensed mentor necessary in the provision of funeral services to client families.

FUSV 2290 - Funeral Arranging and Directing Applied Learning Practicum III
Funeral Arranging and Directing program students at NSCC increase their theoretical knowledge base and develop essential skills while apprenticing as funeral directors. All three applied learning practicum courses are designed to capture the application of theory in the funeral home setting and through engagements with the community. As the theory courses provide the foundation for the applied learning, it is expected that students will continue with their online theory courses while completing each applied learning practicum course. Documented participation in funeral procedures including transfers, preparation of documentation required for all forms of disposition, funeral arrangement conferences, pre-arrangements, set-up for funerals, tribute services, visitations and committals, directing funerals, memorial services, and committal services and all tasks as requested by the licensed mentor necessary in the provision of funeral services to client families.

FUSV 2300 - Funeral Service Management Practices
This course introduces the basic principles of management as they apply to the funeral service business. Students will explore the role, function, and management skills of the funeral director as manager. Management roles involving client services, personnel and financial management, marketing and public relations, product and supply inventory, and facilities and equipment will be discussed. Course cases will present interesting management problems for students to identify and offer solutions.

FUSV 7001 - Funeral Programs Orientation
Orientation for NSCC Funeral Programs.

SAFE 1000 - Introduction to WHMIS (Workplace Hazardous Materials Information Systems)
This course offers learners basic overview of WHMIS principles and establishes a solid foundation to support workplace-specific training on the safe storage and handling of controlled/hazardous products. Upon successful completion of the course, students receive basic WHMIS certification.

SAFE 1001 - Introduction to NS OH&S Act
This course offers students an introduction to the Occupational Health & Safety (OH&S) Act of Nova Scotia, which is required by any person employed in a Nova Scotia workplace. This is a generic, introductory course that provides basic knowledge of the Act for students and is considered to be the basis from which more specific training can be given.

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