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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
See department chair for details.Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
This course examines spatial patterns of the natural forces that build up and break down the earth's exterior and their impact on human life.It studies spatial patterns of human behavior and their impact on the earth.The course stresses the use and understanding of maps in considering continental drift, oceans, earthquakes, volcanoes, soil formation, weather systems, natural resources, and the impact of population growth, agriculture, urbanization, and mass migrations.Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
Students undertake an interdisciplinary project on environmental issues.Student proposals require support from one faculty member and approval by the dean prior to registration.EV 299 may be taken at any stage in the student's career; EV 399 is reserved for seniors earning a minor in environmental studies or environmental sciences and is conjoined with an internship or other voluntary service with an organization involved in preserving or managing the natural environment.Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
This seminar examines environmental, ethical, and socioeconomic issues of Latin America and the Caribbean.It integrates the hard sciences (biology, chemistry, physics, and physical geography), the social sciences (sociology, politics, economics, and business), and the humanities (history, ethics, theology, and literature).The capstone experience provides students with an overview of multiple perspectives on the environment of Latin America and the Caribbean with a focus on some specific countries and issues.Students conduct independent research projects that demonstrate their mastery of at least one component of each disciplinary group.This seminar counts for the capstone requirement for the minor in Applied Ethics, the minor in Environmental Studies, and the minor in Latin American and Caribbean Studies. This course meets the world diversity requirement. Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
This course for non-majors covers financial decision-making from a personal standpoint.The course examines investments including stocks, bonds, housing purchases, and mutual funds with an emphasis on the elementary financial principles of risk and return.Other topics include life, health, and other insurance needs, and pension and estate planning.Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
With the rate of financial innovation and globalization, increasing financial instruments and institutions are becoming international in nature and scope.This course surveys a variety of financial instruments, institutions, and markets from a global perspective and covers the relationship between financial intermediaries and central banks.Students review the use of traditional and new financial instruments in the context of the specific markets they serve.(Prerequisite: FI 101) Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
This course offers a general view of the operation of security markets and the factors that influence security prices.Further, it includes basic analysis and valuation of stocks, bonds, options, and futures.The course also provides an introduction to the tools and techniques that can be used to measure performance, manage risk, and construct efficient portfolios.(Prerequisite: FI 101) Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
The analysis of optimal financial decision-making for corporate financial managers emphasizes corporate investment, financing, and dividend decisions within the framework of efficient capital markets.Further, the course explores the topics of cash budgeting, real options, economic value added, mergers and acquisitions, bankruptcy, and corporate risk management.(Prerequisite: FI 101) Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
This course examines the management of current assets and current liabilities and emphasizes cash and marketable securities management, cash budgeting, inventory control, accounts receivable management, and short-term and intermediate-term financing.(Prerequisite: FI 101) Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
This course deals with the international aspects of corporate finance.Topics include foreign exchange with emphasis on exchange rate determination, exchange rate risk management, international money and capital markets, international capital budgeting, cost of capital, and international trade financing.(Prerequisite: FI 215) Three credits.
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