The intermediate course is and it looks like Jim is planning to run it again in the fall.
http://spao.ca/art-of-digital-printmaking-2018f
The course covered the materials in Bruce's link titled "Image Optimization" and many of the other topics under "Setting up the working environment". We spent some time on discussing proper viewing lights for evaluating prints, setting up (calibrating and profiling the screen), the working environment (light levels and work area colour), etc. This is the course that I took last year.
The two key takeaways from the course were:
A modern camera has a dynamic range of over 14 ev. In the right working environment, most modern, high quality screens have a dynamic range of 10 ev (1000:1 contrast ratio). A print shown in a gallery environment has a dynamic range from 7.5 ev (matte paper) to 8 ev (lustre / glossy paper). The photographer needs to pull out what was captured and bring those details out in a print.
The other key learning is the difference between a good print and a great one is making small selections and corrections. Michael Tardioli, SPAO's founder (who was Karsh's printer) tells me that he often has 50 or more adjustment layers in one of his images. Making fast, accurate selections and tweaking them are the key to a great image. He generally spends around 4 hours a day printing. He usually holds a Capture to Print course over the summer, but it does not seem to show up on the SPAO website yet.