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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
3 credits A basic survey course in business law. Stresses the laws of contracts as the basis for most commercial transactions and applies the law of contracts to the specific contracts of bailments and carriers, insurance, suretyships, and negotiable instruments.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Prerequisite: BUS 250. An advanced course in business law covering the application of the legal process and the law of contracts to the specific contracts of bailments, agency, guaranty and suretyship, insurance, and partnerships and corporations. Detailed consideration is given to wills, states of decedents, and bankruptcy.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Prerequisite: MGT 262. This course examines the nature and impact of law and ethics on the domestic and international operations of a business enterprise. The law is studied as an instrument of social change. Specific attention is paid to regulatory agencies, unions and labor relations, antitrust, consumer affairs, environmental impact, and contracts. The course also addresses the relationship of ethics to profit, social responsibility, government relations, and the role of business in society.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Research and report presentation, both written and oral. Emphasis on clarity and conciseness in writing applied to business letters, memos, and short and long reports; persuasive speaking to one or many; communication skills for the work place.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Prerequisites: MGT 262, ECA 111 and 112. Open to juniors and seniors only. An examination of the foundations and environments of international business. Fundamental objectives and forms such as market expansion, resource acquisition, diversification, joint ventures, foreign direct investment, exports, and licensing are introduced. A comparative approach is used to examine the major environments affecting the growth of international business: legal, cultural, economic, political, financial, and technological. Finally, the action of the multinational enterprise upon its environment, specifically its attempts to develop firm-specific assets that are exploited in more or less “market-friendly” foreign locations, is explored.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Prerequisites: MGT 262. To be taken in the last year of student’s program. The pros and cons of an entrepreneurial career are explored. Students learn the importance of making personal trade-offs to cope with uncertainty, failure, and success. The evolution of organizational structure in the entrepreneurial firm and the stages of venture development are emphasized. Fostering the entrepreneurial and creative spirit of the large and small organization is a focal point. Entrepreneurs present their success stories throughout the course.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits To be taken in the last semester of student’s program. This senior-level course integrates and synthesizes the concepts and techniques developed in prior courses in order to construct a rational basis for developing business objectives and strategic plans. Problem identification, strategy formulation, and decision implementation issues are stressed. Business simulation, case studies, and role-playing are some avenues taken to convey course content.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Examines, from a chemistry perspective, contemporary understanding of some major modern environmental and social issues, including energy usage and supplies, global warming, nutrition and health, and genetic engineering. No laboratory. This course cannot be used to satisfy chemistry requirements for science majors.
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4.00 Credits
4 credits The first half of a one-year course in general chemistry as applied to environmental studies. The course stresses the practical applications of chemical principles to problem of the environment. The required laboratory portion of the course reinforces these applications.
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4.00 Credits
4 credits The second half of a one-year course in general chemistry as applied to environmental studies. The course stresses the practical applications of organic chemistry and instrumental analysis to problems of the environment. The required laboratory portion of the course reinforces these applications.
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