香港六合彩开奖结果2023

Skip to Main Content
Office of Institutional Effectiveness
oneColumn

Economics Bachelor of Business Administration

Program Mission Statement

The Department of Economics and Geography is committed to the delivery of exceptional undergraduate and graduate instruction by faculty members who are both actively engaged in scholarly activities and capable of integrating the results of their research into their instructional activities. Our intent is that this instruction will emphasize our role in guiding students to prepare them to be intellectual resources that will continually redevelop to serve many organizations over a productive career. Students are expected to take courses in microeconomics and macroeconomics, as well as econometric courses that provide the foundation of the instrumental to undertake economic analysis. Students will gain experience in the understanding of the global economy by taking international economics courses as well as having a study abroad experience. We also recognize our responsibility to provide economics related service to the University and Jacksonville communities.

Student Learning Outcomes

Graduates will be able to:

Content/Discipline-Specific Knowledge/Skills

  • Students will understand the global economy and recognize the impact of diverse socioeconomic and cultural factors on business operations.
  • Students will acquire knowledge in the major functional areas of business (accounting, economics, management, finance, marketing, and quantitative business analysis) and understand the interrelationships among them.
  • Students will demonstrate a foundational knowledge in the principles of economics.

Communication Skills

Students will communicate effectively in both oral and written formats.

Critical Thinking Skills

Students will identify and reconcile ethical issues in decision making.

Assessment Approaches

The Coggin College of Business operates a college-wide strategy to assess its learning objectives. Each of the 11 programs of study (housed in 4 departments) has adopted these as its learning objectives, which link to the university's three broad learning categories. While each of these objectives is differentially emphasized in the various programs of study, they are common to the core body of knowledge provided to all students majoring in a sub-field of business. In addition, each program of study has a discipline-specific learning outcome reflecting disciplinary learning students gain in their specific field of interest. The college utilizes a multi-year time horizon to assess alternating objectives. This time horizon corresponds to the AACSB (re)accreditation cycle.

Written and oral communication are assessed by student performance during ENC3202 Professional Communication for Business, using standardized, anchored grading rubrics. Ethical reasoning is assessed via a written essay in response to a case in MAN4720 Strategic Management and Business Policy.

Discipline-specific learning in the major field of study as well as content knowledge in the functional areas of business is assessed via the Major Field Test in Business, an instrument of the Educational Testing Service (ETS). It is administered in each student's last term in his/her program of study via the capstone policy course. Discipline-specific learning in the major field of study is measured by the students' performance (sub-score) on the Economics assessment indicator. Functional business content knowledge is measured by the overall score, as well as the score on each of eight assessment indicators (sub-scores), including economics, management, quantitative analysis, finance, marketing, legal/social environment, and information systems.

Assessment mechanisms may change over time.