Business Administration (Master's)
Degrees and Certificates
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Master of Business Administration (MBA) – Work Integrated Learning (WIL), Master of Business Administration -
MBA/MSCS STEM Based Pathway Program with WIL, MBA/MSCS
Courses
MBA2001: Personality and Motivation
Credits 3MBA2002: Positive Psychology for Business
Credits 3MBA2003: Decision Science
Credits 3MBA3001: Accounting
Credits 3This course covers the concepts and principles that underlie corporate financial statements, including the balance sheet, income statement, and cash flow statement. The use of accounting reports by both internal and external users is considered. Topics include assets, liabilities, cash flows, profits, revenues, expenses, financial ratios, efficiency, productivity, profitability, budgeting, cost analysis, and management. Case studies are examined in detail using the balance sheets of public companies to consider a company’s performance and future potential. The course concludes with the application of innovative accounting approaches to ensure that the organization is financially successful in the short term and long run and can strategically compete in the global STEM based business environment with a sound financial profile.
MBA3002: Finance
Credits 3This course introduces the principles of corporate finance. It focuses on measurement and creation of corporate value. The course applies key principles of finance in decision-making and management to enable sound interpretation and analysis of financial statements. Topics include asset valuation, risk analysis, financial statement analysis, financial planning, capital budgeting, asset management, short-term and long-term financing decisions, capital structure, cost of capital, and dividend policy. Fundamental concepts include free cash flow, time-value of money, risk and return, portfolios, and asset pricing models. The course includes strategic case studies to exemplify sound financial judgment and decision making.
MBA3004: Data Analysis and Forecasting
Credits 3This course focuses on applying analytical methods for data analysis to support managerial and strategic organizational decision making. Topics include descriptive statistics for summarizing data, probabilistic analysis for quantifying uncertainty, sampling and statistical inference for hypothesis testing, and linear regression analysis for prediction and forecasting. The course has a key emphasis on data analytics and forecasting in the science, technology, engineering, and management domains to ensure that the organization makes viable decision in the complex and ever-changing global business environment.
MBA3005: Operations
Credits 3MBA3006: Business Law and Ethics
Credits 3MBA3007: Strategy
Credits 3This course covers the concepts, models, and frameworks for formulating, analyzing, and implementing corporate and organizational strategy. It focuses on the fundamental dimensions of strategy, and how to differentiate between organizational strategy, operations, and tactics. Topics include eliciting corporate values and formulating objectives, analyzing market opportunities and risks, developing long- range strategies, industry analysis, competition, differentiation, and diversification. The course also considers the challenges of managing strategic change, the impact of emerging technologies on business strategy, globalization, and the “triple bottom line” (economic, social, environmental). Extensive case studies are covered in the science, technology, engineering, and management domains to ensure that organizational strategy maps to the current complex global business environment.
MBA3008: Marketing
Credits 3MBA4001 : Capstone
Credits 3The MBA Capstone course is an exercise in synthesizing the knowledge and skills culminating from the entire degree program. Focused on innovation and problem-solving, the Capstone project encompasses marketing, operations, finance, law, ethics, and management, emphasizing technology innovation, sustainability, and global leadership. Students undertake an exploratory phase to identify and address current industry trends, developing innovative solutions that reflect their personal and professional interests. Key project themes include customer engagement, marketing strategies, conflict resolution, change implications, cultural impacts in business, and the application of artificial intelligence drawn from the transpersonal principles and applied business theories learned throughout the program.
Must complete all other MBA core program courses before taking the Capstone.
MBA4301: Organizational Leadership and Management
Credits 3MBA4302: Organizational Psychology
Credits 3MBA4401: Technology Innovation and Product Management
Credits 3MBA4601: Marketing and Consumer Psychology
Credits 3MBA4602: Sustainability and Global Leadership
Credits 3Current corporate culture often wrongly focuses on operating efficiency and short-term results instead of sustainable value creation that focuses on the needs of critical stakeholders (including the environment) over time. This course examines how forward-looking leaders can integrate sustainable and socially responsible business practices into an organization. We start by reviewing the concept of sustainability, why it is important and how our own personal standards of living impact the planet we inhabit. We explore various ways sustainability can be applied within an organization to drive innovation and build organizational and societal longevity and adaptability. The course is taught from a practical point of view, utilizing a combination of readings, current media, interactive sessions, lectures, discussions, case analyses, simulations, presentations, guest speakers, videos, and skill-building exercises.
WIL5000: Full-Time Internship for Business Administration
Credits 0This class is a guide through a professional internship to ensure that the internship provides professional learning experiences that will be applied to the professional arena. Students undertake a significant experiential learning opportunity, typically with a company or community-based organization. The internship represents an educational strategy that links classroom learning and student interest with the acquisition of knowledge in an applied work setting. Through direct observation, reflection and evaluation, students gain an understanding of the internship site's work, mission, and audience, how these potentially relate to their academic study, as well as the organization's position in the broader industry or field. Students will produce a critical reflection on their internship experience demonstrating how they have addressed specific learning goals.