Apr 28, 2024  
2022-2023 Academic Catalog V2 
    
2022-2023 Academic Catalog V2 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Doctoral Courses


Doctorate Program

Courses

Business

  • BUS 761 - Current Topics in Business Research


    (3 Credits)

    This course will feature an alternating set of topics based on current research.  Potential topics may include leadership, emerging markets and/or segments, social media trends, and data analytics. 

  • BUS 762 - Current Topics in Business Research II


    (3 Credits)

    This course will feature an alternating set of topics based on current research.  Potential topics may include leadership, emerging markets and/or segments, social media trends, and data analytics.

    Prerequisite(s): BUS 761  
  • BUS 763 - Current Topics in Business Research III


    (3 Credits)

    This course will feature an alternating set of topics based on current research.  Potential topics may include leadership, emerging markets and/or segments, social media trends, and data analytics. 

    Prerequisite(s): STA 770  
  • BUS 764 - Current Topics in Business Research IV


    (3 Credits)

    This course will feature an alternating set of topics based on current research.  Potential topics may include leadership, emerging markets and/or segments, social media trends, and data analytics. 

    Prerequisite(s): BUS 763  

DBA

  • DBA 901 - Dissertation I


    (3 Credits)

    The DBA dissertation project requires a minimum of 12 semester credit hours for completion. This process involves research by the student with advisement from a faculty member serving as Chair. A dissertation project proposal must be completed and approved by the student’s dissertation committee before the student collects data for their research. Once the dissertation is complete, the student will present their results before the faculty and colleagues. Students who have not completed their work at the conclusion of DBA 901 will register for DBA 902 in order to receive academic advisement and to remain in good standing in the program.

    Prerequisite(s): MGT 784  
  • DBA 902 - Dissertation II


    (3 Credits)

    The DBA dissertation project requires a minimum of 12 semester credit hours for completion. This process involves research by the student with advisement from a faculty member serving as Chair. A dissertation project proposal must be completed and approved by the student’s dissertation committee before the student collects data for their research. Once the dissertation is complete, the student will present their results before the faculty and colleagues. Students who have not completed their work at the conclusion of DBA 902 will register for DBA 903 in order to receive academic advisement and to remain in good standing in the program.

    Prerequisite(s): DBA 901  
  • DBA 903 - Dissertation III


    (3 Credits)

    The DBA dissertation project requires a minimum of 12 semester credit hours for completion. This process involves research by the student with advisement from a faculty member serving as Chair. A dissertation project proposal must be completed and approved by the student’s dissertation committee before the student collects data for their research. Once the dissertation is complete, the student will present their results before the faculty and colleagues. Students who have not completed their work at the conclusion of DBA 903 will register for DBA 904 in order to receive academic advisement and to remain in good standing in the program.

    Prerequisite(s): DBA 902  
  • DBA 904 - Dissertation IV


    (3 Credits)

    The DBA dissertation project requires a minimum of 12 semester credit hours for completion. This process involves research by the student with advisement from a faculty member serving as Chair. A dissertation project proposal must be completed and approved by the student’s dissertation committee before the student collects data for their research. Once the dissertation is complete, the student will present their results before the faculty and colleagues. Students who have not completed their work at the conclusion of DBA 904 will reregister for DBA 904 in a continuing basis in order to receive academic advisement and to remain in good standing in the program.

    Prerequisite(s): DBA 903  

Finance

  • FIN 754 - Financial Decision Making in Corporations


    (3 Credits)

    This course examines the financial tools that mission-driven corporations, institutions and governments use to apply decision-making. The course is created for entrepreneurs, C-Suite executives, mid-level managers and business leaders to guide them in financial analysis skills through a combination of lecture, classroom discussion, analysis and online research. The course will explore the complex relationship between strategy, management, finance and governance that organizations must navigate on the day-to-day basis. Where appropriate, we will integrate best practices in performance management and the alignment of financial and social returns.

Management

  • MGT 755 - Contemporary Organizational Strategy


    (3 Credits)

    This course explores the dynamics of global organizations, focusing on strategic management, the theories of organizations and industries, and the behavior of individuals and teams in global settings.  Students will be tasked with explaining and summarizing the state of their industry, applying new models and research questions that anticipate and address emerging concerns, analyzing best practices from similar and dissimilar fields of research, formulating alternative strategies for success, and justifying organizational changes with data. 

  • MGT 759 - Integrative Management in Business


    (3 Credits)

    This doctoral course examines the types and practical usage of various management techniques in corporations. It is designed to give students high-level managerial knowledge and skills of how employees influence management, how management impacts ownership, and how ownership acts on the business ecosystem. Emphasis is placed on the integration of leadership style, environmental factors, company culture, and innovation. The uses of information technology in the workplace is also emphasized.

  • MGT 763 - Innovation and Entrepreneurship/Intrapreneurship in Business


    (3 Credits)

    This course outlines how executives can apply innovative strategies in entrepreneurial/intrapreneurial ventures by designing new products, services, processes, organizational structures, and business models.  The students apply and consider several variables that influence entrepreneurship/intrapreneurship within an organization to analyze the most effective ways to not only create change in an organization, but install systems to greatly increase the likelihood of this change being lasting.  Students will generate organizational plans to manage innovation and change initiatives over long periods of time and measure the results of these changes.

    Prerequisite(s): BUS 764  
  • MGT 781 - International Business and Foreign Relations


    (3 Credits)

    This course is an advanced look at the unique problems faced by firms engaging in international activities.  The students will be able to discuss the mechanics of importing and exporting, joint ventures, franchising, managing subsidiaries, international dimensions of management, marketing and accounting, international financial management and the unique challenges facing multi-national corporations.  Student will learn to apply current international business practice to contemporary problems and investigate new solutions based on designing innovative strategies.  They will then judge the achievement of corporate objectives relative to firm goals. 

    Prerequisite(s): BUS 762  
  • MGT 784 - Corporate Social Responsibility


    (3 Credits)

    This course provides an advanced perspective on business ethics.  Employee issues and responsibilities, leadership and decision-making, morality, diversity, discrimination, and ethics in marketing and advertising are explored.  Students will also study the philosophical theories behind the practices of corporations with the context of social responsibility. 

    Prerequisite(s): MGT 763  

Marketing

  • MKT 767 - Marketing Management, Research, and Analysis


    (3 Credits)

    This course will provide students with the opportunity to view the marketing process holistically and use research and analysis to effectively maximize impact.  Students will estimate viable marketing segments, select target markets, create positioning statements, research differentiation strategies and design price, promotion, and placement choices.  This is done by constructing programs based on consumer behavior theory.  Students will be using sampling, qualitative research design, survey construction and analysis, and appraising results of analysis to maximize results in organizations. 

    Prerequisite(s): MGT 781  

Statistics

  • STA 758 - Introductory Statistics for Business Research


    (3 Credits)

    This course covers a variety of foundational statistical techniques that support doctoral research in business.  Basic statistical concepts will be reviewed and the students will be introduced to methods of organizing, interpreting, and presenting data.  Students will be introduced to descriptive and visual univariate and bivariate statistics in Excel and R. They will learn the laws of probability, become familiar with the major families of discrete and continuous random variables, and study sampling, the foundation of inferential statistics.

  • STA 765 - Intermediate Statistics for Business Research


    (3 Credits)

    This course explores intermediate concepts and topics in statistical research methods. Topics include confidence intervals and hypothesis testing for means and proportions, comparison of populations, multiple regression, and ANOVA. Control charting will be discussed if time permits. Students will continue to work in Excel and R.

    Prerequisite(s): STA 758  
  • STA 770 - Advanced Statistics for Business Research


    (3 Credits)

    This course is designed to prepare students to perform advanced data analysis in business research. Topics include chi-squared tests, logistic regression, time series, principal components analysis, and cluster analysis. Design of experiments and non-parametric methods will be discussed if time permits. Most work will be done in R.

    Prerequisite(s): STA 758