|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Course Criteria
Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
-
3.00 Credits
This course intends to promote awareness of various language patterns in the oral and written language of individuals from multi-ethnic backgrounds.
-
3.00 Credits
Comparative studies of great authors, genres, and periods.
-
3.00 Credits
A research course designed to have majors think through what they have learned in their discipline, to share their knowledge with one another and the faculty, and to expand their knowledge of the field both in depth and breadth.
-
1.00 Credits
Co-requisite: EN 212. This laboratory course enables students to validate the major concepts covered in ENG 212, digital Logic. Experiments include basic gates, adders, counters, and Flip-Flops.
-
1.00 Credits
Co-requisite: EN 220. This laboratory enables students to validate the major concepts covered in EN220, Circuit Theory. Experiments include OHM's law, node voltage analysis, RC circuits, and RL circuits.
-
3.00 Credits
An introductory course designed to familiarize students with the world of small business, and analyze the personal strengths and weaknesses of students relative to launching a career in entrepreneurship. Attention is given to planning, financing, starting, and managing a new business. Elective-open to all majors. (F, S, Sum)
-
3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: BPD 325W, MNGT 330, and Junior standing. This course is designed to prepare the entrepreneurship student for the general management role of the entrepreneur. Critical issues affecting entrepreneurship and small business management will be examined. The primary focus of the course will include small business planning, locating and using information, and the fundamentals of business planning. A comparative view of entrepreneurship and case analyses will be used. (F, S)
-
3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: ENTR 381, FIN 320, and Junior standing. The course will focus on understanding and exploring the requirements, costs and benefits of various forms of financing options open to the entrepreneur. Special emphasis will be placed on finance issues of particular relevance to the minority entrepreneur, as well as on funding sources for capital and operating needs of minority entrepreneurs. Methods of profit planning and cash flow management will be covered. Accounting for small business and internal controls will be stressed. (F)
-
3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: ENTR 381, 382, BPD 325W, and Senior standing. This course will explore financing entrepreneurial companies at various phases of the life cycle. Students will also gain an understanding of what is in the numbers and how they reflect a specific strategy. Other topics will include financing of start-up businesses, season business, acquisitions, and public offerings. Also emphasis will be placed on analyzing legal documents so that the student will have a practical experience in this critical aspect of financing entrepreneurial ventures. (S)
-
3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: MKT 351, MNGT 330, ENTR 381, 382, and Senior standing. This course is designed to introduce the new entrepreneur to the importance and role of marketing strategies in creating and organizing a new business, as well as in existing small businesses. The major emphasis will be on: ways to analyze and define the target market, evaluating competition, environmental trends, determining customer preference, and developing a marketing strategy for the start-up or existing business. (S)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Privacy Statement
|
Cookies Policy |
Terms of Use
|
Institutional Membership Information
|
About AcademyOne
Copyright 2006 - 2025 AcademyOne, Inc.
|
|
|