|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Course Criteria
Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
-
2.00 Credits
Prerequisite: College algebra and elementary statistics or DSIM (BUS) 500. Introduces students to a group of quantitative tools that assure high quality managerial decision-making. Topics to be covered are break-even analysis, linear programming, inventory control models (EOQ), waiting line models, decision theory, time series forecasting and project management (PERT and CPM).
-
2.00 Credits
Prerequisites: DSIM 500, DSIM 530 or undergraduate equivalent. The course will focus on the activities necessary to produce and deliver goods and services in today's business entities. The concepts that help managers deal with these activities (such as operations strategy and process choice, total quality management, statistical quality control, project management, supply chain management, capacity management, and customer service) are examined and applied. Operations within traditional manufacturing firms, as well as service organizations, are covered.
-
1.00 - 3.00 Credits
A study of selected topics of major interest in Decision Sciences and/or Information Management not covered in other course offerings. May be taken for credit more than once, if different topic.
-
1.00 - 3.00 Credits
A study of related Decision Science and/or Information Management topics that is closely supervised by a faculty member. Activities will normally be conducted by students out of the classroom with periodic meetings and evaluation by the faculty member who is mentoring the project. May be taken for credit more than once, but only 3 credit hours will be counted toward satisfying the degree requirements.
-
3.00 Credits
Cross-listed with MKG 371. Three hours per week. Prerequisites: DSIM 203. This course prepares the next generation of business managers for success in electronic business. It explores the tools, skills, business and social implications of emerging electronic business. In addition to acquiring basic skills for identifying electronic business opportunities and creating a presence in the online marketplace, the student reexamines fundamental processes of business as they are performed in cyberspace in contrast to the marketplace. Topics include an introduction to the economics of information and information products, the roles of e-supply chains, corporate portals and public business-to-business exchanges; e-support services, auctions and e-commerce security issues and processes; the impact of e-commerce on organizational strategy and industry structure; in depth assessment of successful e-commerce strategies; and innovative e-commerce systems. Students have to complete an organizational case study of e-business technology implementation and create a business plan for a technology venture. Credit cannot be awarded for both DSIM 371 and MKG 371.
-
3.00 Credits
Three hours per week. Prerequisite: ECON 201. A "C" orbetter must be earned in ECON 202 as a prerequisite for ECON 304 and in order to use this course as part of the economics major or minor. An introduction to microeconomics emphasizing current economic ideas, functions, and institutions. Also examined are topics concerning the problem of scarcity in a society of abundance, production, income distribution, price determination, competition, and monopoly.
-
3.00 Credits
Three hours per week. Prerequisite: ECON 202. Analysis of the characteristics of the American labor force, factors influencing employment and unemployment, market forces determining wages and hours, nature of wage and hour legislation, and economic analysis of social security.
-
3.00 Credits
Three hours per week. Prerequisites: ECON 201, and ECON 202 with a "C" or better. A "C" or better required in order to use this course as part of the economics major, and it should be completed before senior status. This course is designed to give the advanced student a more detailed and analytical understanding of the role of prices in economic decision making.
-
3.00 Credits
Three hours per week. Prerequisites: ECON 201 with a "C" or better , ECON 202 . A "C" or better required in order to use this course as part of the economics major, and it should be completed before senior status. National income accounts and the determination of the level of gross national product. Analysis is made of the forces that cause inflation and recessions in our economy and an interpretation of how monetary and fiscal policy alter the levels reached by the economy. Classical as well as Keynesian and post- Keynesian models are examined.
-
3.00 Credits
Three hours per week. Prerequisites: ECON 201 or consent of instructor. A study of the development and philosophy of various economies in the world, including the European Union, Russia, China, Japan, India, Latin America and Africa. Student research projects are an integral part of the course.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Privacy Statement
|
Terms of Use
|
Institutional Membership Information
|
About AcademyOne
Copyright 2006 - 2025 AcademyOne, Inc.
|
|
|