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School of Business University of Bridgeport

School of Business University of Bridgeport. Robert Gilmore, Ph.D. Associate Dean School of Business. Why Come to the UB School of Business? --- At First Glance. Curriculum Innovation Small Classes Students Work Closely with Professors

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School of Business University of Bridgeport

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  1. School of BusinessUniversity of Bridgeport Robert Gilmore, Ph.D. Associate Dean School of Business

  2. Why Come to the UB School of Business? --- At First Glance • Curriculum Innovation • Small Classes • Students Work Closely with Professors • Faculty have both professional experience and academic credentials • Students study in an international environment

  3. Location Advantages Industry in Connecticut and New York! e.g., Finance Industry • Close to Stamford, CT --- Financial Services • Close to Hartford, CT --- Insurance • One Hour from New York City

  4. Accreditation Licensed and accredited by the State of Connecticut Department of Higher Education Accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges (NEASC). Professionally accredited by the Association of Collegiate Business Schools and Programs

  5. Overview of Business Programs • Undergraduate Program • Bachelor of Science • 8 possible Majors • Graduate Program • Master of Business Administration • 12 Concentrations • Curriculum and Pedagogical Innovations

  6. Undergraduate Business CurriculumBachelor of Science (B.S.) Credits 42 University Core Curriculum (Liberal Arts and Sciences) 51 Business Core Curriculum 12 Business Electives (Concentration Courses) 15 General Electives _______ 120

  7. University Core: General Education Requirements 42 Credits of Liberal Arts and Sciences • First Year Seminar • Math • Composition and Rhetoric • Advanced Composition for Business • Natural Sciences Core (choices – 6 credits) • Humanities Core (choices – 6 credits) • Fine Arts Core (choices – 3 credits) • Social Sciences Core (choices – 6 credits) • Macro Economics • Micro Economics • Capstone Seminar Flexibility for Joint Programs

  8. Undergraduate Business Core Curriculum51 Credits Principles of Accounting I Multiculture Management Principles of Accounting II Operations Management Managerial/Cost Accounting Statistics Managerial Finance Applied Statistics Investment Principles Multinational Finance Principles of Marketing Multinational Marketing Capstone Business Policy and Strategy Introduction to CAIS Senior Project/Internship Computer Concepts Business Law Curriculum Revision Create flexibility for joint programs

  9. Undergraduate Concentrations12 Credits Accounting Business Administration Computer Applications and Information Systems Fashion Merchandising Finance International Business Management and Industrial Relations Marketing

  10. Admission RequirementsUndergraduate Evaluate the Total Student with Combined Criteria • High School Diploma • Grade Point Average (G.P.A.) • Class Rank • SAT scores • TOEFL (550 Paper, 80 Internet Based) Mutually agreed upon criteria for joint program

  11. Joint Undergraduate Programs • Wide Variety of Combinations are possible • Flexibility as to what is taught at each school • Liberal Arts and Sciences • Business Courses

  12. Master of Business Administration (MBA) Program • Program Description • Admission Requirements • What Is Special? • Why Come to the University of Bridgeport?

  13. Program Description 24 Credits --- Core Courses (May be waived) 30 Credits --- Required (Concentration and Capstone) ___________ • Credits --- Completed typically in 3 semesters (18 months) to 6 semesters (3 years if student takes 9 credits a semester) One Year (2 semesters possible – 30 Credits)

  14. MBA Admission Requirements and Scholarships • Bachelor Degree • 950 = GMAT + (200*G.P.A.) • GMAT (May be waived) • TOEFL Minimum (550 Paper, 80 Internet)* • *Take English Language Courses at UB if below 600 • Scholarships up to $5,000 depending on qualifications

  15. MBA Curriculum – 4 C’s • Core • Concentrations • Capstone • Competencies

  16. Core and Required Core Courses --- Foundation and Breadth • Accounting • Finance • Economics • Business Law • Management • Marketing • Statistics • Information Systems Business Research (required)

  17. Concentrations • Accounting • Finance • Information Systems and Knowledge Management • International Business • Human Resource Management • Management • Marketing • Operations • Small Business and Entrepreneurship • General Business • Financial Services • Specialized Business

  18. Innovation (Curriculum) Financial Services • Intended for those who need an understanding of different financial services organizations (e.g., Investment and Commercial Banking, Securities, Real Estate, Insurance, and Financial Planning) • Often Back Office managers need this knowledge as financial services firms are integrated across these different areas

  19. Innovation (Curriculum) Specialized Business • Intended for those whose career path doesn’t fit into the standard MBA concentrations • Students may create their own combination of courses to fit a particular career • (e.g., 3 Marketing and 3 Information Systems) • (e.g., 3 Human Resource Management, 1 Operations, 1 Information Systems) • Must have approval of Faculty Advisor

  20. Capstone ExperienceIntegration and Interdisciplinary • Courses • Strategy and Business Policy • Computerized Business Simulation • Internship or Applied Thesis • Integrate their knowledge and skills • Accounting, Finance, Management, Marketing, Information Systems, Economics, Law, Statistics, Research • Application of concepts • Understanding how all business areas work together

  21. International Business • International Concentration • International content Embedded in each course as relevant to that discipline • International Student Teams working together

  22. Competencies • Employers want to hire students who can write, speak, and compute! • We are Emphasizing and Measuring all three • Coding of Syllabi • How much writing in each course • How many oral presentations • How much computing (math, statistics, computer skills) • Learning Assessment • Because we measure we can control and adjust the amount of various classroom activities according to learning outcomes

  23. Competencies • Leadership • Teamwork • Critical Thinking • Decision Making • Innovation and Creativity • Communication Skill within Team • Organization Ability

  24. Competencies --- Experimental • Most universities talk about competencies • We will Emphasize in teaching and Measure ! • Each class with Team Assignments: • Students will evaluate each other in team context • and professor will evaluate student in team context • Cumulative rating across courses • Students will know their strengths – help to make career decisions • Employers will know student strengths – help to make hiring decisions

  25. Content • How do we ensure coverage of needed content? • Courses have complete listing of common material that all professors teach • List of common material is in the form of exam questions • Code for application of concepts and skills in advanced courses • Exam questions may be used for waiver exams, capstone examination, and as student study guides.

  26. What we Teach The I’s in Each StudentThe 4 C’s of the Curriculum Integration Core Interdisciplinary Concentrations International Capstone Competencies

  27. Our Learning Goal for Student Success • College graduates will typically have sevendifferent careers in their working lifetime. Thus, specific tasks that they are trained to do today may not be useful tomorrow. • Adapt and learn how to learn! • We accomplish this by teaching fundamental skills and coreknowledge on which they can build and basic principles which they can apply to new situations. • Students are challenged in the classrooms with the wide variety of assignments, projects, cases, presentations and exams, thus they learn how to learn. • Students are also challenged with working with students from many different countries. This requires the practice of adaptation. • Adaptation also learned through the emphasis on Competencies

  28. Vision for the Future • Pedagogical Innovation • International Business Education • Establish Partnerships with other Universities • Establish Centers of Excellence • Center for Global Financial Services • Center for Small Business and Entrepreneurship • Center for Retail and Sales Management • Center for Health Care Management • External Funding Plan

  29. Questions

  30. Innovation (Curriculum) • Small Business and Entrepreneurship • Required Courses • Small Business and Entrepreneurship course Creating the Students Real Business • Small Business Practicum 1 • Small Business Practicum 2 • Electives • Three courses in any discipline related to the business that the student wants to pursue

  31. Finance Compared to Financial Services Financial ServicesFinance • RequiredRequired • Managerial and Cost Accounting International Finance • Financial Derivatives and Risk Management Financial Derivatives and Risk Management • Money and Banking Investment Analysis • Global Financial Services Regulation • Cases in Finance Cases in Finance • ElectivesElectives • Investment Banking Advanced Financial Management and Policy • Insurance Management and Financial Institutions • Commercial Banking International Financial Management • Real Estate Financial Analysis and Modeling • Financial Planning Managerial Economics

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