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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course provides a study of the major financial institutions and the role that major institutional investors serve in the current financial system. Topics include commercial banks, mutual funds, securities firms, insurance companies and pension funds. Prerequisite: Completion of FIN300 with a grade of 2.0 or higher. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Fall Semester Study of international aspects of financial transactions. Topics include: risk, expectations, and behavior or exchange rate; currency arrangements and the balance of payments; international capital markets; international money markets; international liquidity and debt crisis. Prerequisites: Completion of ECO200, ECO201, and FIN300 with grades of 2.0 or higher. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Spring Semester This course serves as the second part of Managerial Finance I and is required of all economics and finance majors. Students use the decision-making tools acquired in Managerial Finance I to study corporate dividend policy, capital structure, share repurchases, stock splits, and security issues. A major portion of the course is a discussion on corporate mergers and acquisitions. Students will also be exposed to options and futures contracts and the various types of financial risk that can be hedged by using these derivative securities. Prerequisite: Completion of FIN300 with a grade of 2.0 or higher. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
This course serves as an introduction to the rapidly expanding derivatives market. Both hedging and speculating techniques are used to explore the use of options, future contracts, and swaps. Emphasis is placed on trade-off between risk and expected return and the advantage which derivative assets have over other, less risky assets. Prerequisite: Completion of FIN300 with a grade of 2.0 or higher. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Spring Semester This capstone course will provide students with an opportunity for intense study in current financial theory and unresolved issues of the current period. Prerequisite: Completion of FIN300, FIN320, FIN340 with a grade of 2.0 or higher and senior standing in the major. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
This course is supervised work experience at a business or government agency for students who have completed several major courses so that application of classroom learning can occur. Students are required to complete a minimum of 120 hours of work during the semester. Internships require students to meet periodically with a faculty supervisor, provide a written deliverable and participate in an end of internship evaluation. Grade is pass/fail. Prerequisite: Completion of FIN300 with a 2.0 or higher and a minimum of 75 credit hours completed with at least a 2.5 GPA. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
This course is an introduction to film as a communicative and artistic medium, with attention to its technological, industrial, social, and aesthetic dimensions. Students will view a wide range of films, including early as well as recent American and foreign films, and learn about the various techniques used to express meaning in cinema, as well as the major critical approaches that can be used to make sense of films. 3 credit hours. Satisfies ADR I.
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3.00 Credits
Spring Semester This course introduces students to the history of film as a medium from its beginnings in the late nineteenth century to the present day and explores the complex relationship between film and history, with attention to the ways in which history has shaped film and film has shaped history. 3 credit hours. Satisfies ADR I.
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3.00 Credits
This course examines the way in which films are routinely produced, marketed, consumed, and classified according to genre-to established categories of cinema delineated by certain general patterns of form and content, such as the Western, the horror film, the musical, and so on. It may be organized as a broad survey of different film genres or as a more focused and in-depth exploration of a single film genre. This course may be repeated for different topics. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
This course explores the theory that film directors, by virtue of the central role they play in guiding the collaborative project of filmmaking, can be considered the authors of films. It may be organized as a focused and in-depth examination of a single director who exhibits a distinctive style and coherent thematic vision in his or her films, or as a broad survey of a group of directors who share the same stylistic or thematic concerns and/or the same gender, ethnicity, or sexual orientation. This course may be repeated for different topics. 3 credit hours.
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