Summer College Courses at Boston University (BU) Summer Term 2008
International Students Courses

Management

Note: the courses on this page reflect Summer Term 2008 offerings.
Please check back on December 15 for a list of courses available during Summer Term 2009.


Metropolitan College


UNDERGRADUATE COURSES

MET MG 301 Introduction to Management
A look at the management of an enterprise from the perspective of the chief executive officer. Covers the functions of organizing for successful management. Survey of theories and techniques. Examination of case studies. 4 cr.

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MET MG 410 Entrepreneurial Management: Starting, Innovating, and Managing Small-, Medium-, and Large-Sized Ventures
Covers the four key elements of successful entrepreneurial management: choosing a business, organizing, financing, and marketing. Includes preparing a business plan, becoming an entrepreneur, raising venture capital, selling, negotiating, and building an effective organization. Topics given special consideration are the practice of innovation, the art of leadership, and how to relate talents to succeeding in an innovative managed venture and technology management. 4 cr.

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MET MG 415 Program and Project Management
An examination of project management concepts, including organizational forms, planning and control techniques, and the role of the project manager. Develops the skills vital to effective management of multidisciplinary tasks through lectures, case studies, and business simulations. 4 cr.

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MET MG 503 Business in a Changing Society
Prereq: advanced standing or consent of instructor. An examination of the management process and the social environment in which organizations operate, including a discussion of the manager's responsibilities to employees, customers, stockholders, and society. 4 cr.

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GRADUATE COURSES

MET AD 657 Economic Sustainability, Development, and Competitiveness of a Tourist Destination
This course allows the student to understand and learn how to develop and manage tourism destinations that have the capability to perform effectively in an increasingly competitive international marketplace in ways that are environmentally, socially, and culturally sustainable. Topics include: the evolving nature of competition and sustainability, dimensions of competitive destination and sustainable destination, the global macro-environment for tourism, the competitive micro-environment, core resources and attractors, supporting facilities, and destination policy, planning, and development. 4 cr.

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MET AD 725 Negotiations and Organizational Conflict Resolution
A communications skills course designed to better understand the nature of conflict and its resolution through persuasion, collaboration, and negotiation. Students will learn theories of interpersonal and organizational conflict and its resolution as applied to personal, corporate, historical, and political contexts. Students will assess their own styles, skills, and values, and develop techniques to better resolve disputes, achieve objectives, and exert influence. 4 cr.

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MET AD 733 Leadership in Management
Provides a comprehensive overview of leadership skills and abilities through an examination of traditional and contemporary models of leadership. Students examine personal attitudes and perceptions as they relate to their leadership abilities and explore such areas as team building, motivation and reward. This course includes a weekend at the Boston University Sargent Center for Outdoor Education in New Hampshire. The program fee includes room and board and transportation for this weekend of experiential learning. 4 cr.

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MET AD 742 Program and Project Management
Examines concepts and applied techniques for cost-effective management of both long-term development programs and smaller short-term projects. Special focus on planning, controlling, and coordinating efforts of multiple individuals and/or working groups. 4 cr.

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MET AD 745 Competitive Strategies for Dynamic Environments
Reviews the process whereby organizations establish and pursue goals within internal and external constraints, resources, and opportunities. Topics include strategy and tactics; the process of strategic choice and adjustment; resource assessment; environmental and competitor analysis; stakeholders and values; and strategy implementation, control, and valuation. 4 cr.

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MET AD 754 International Commerce: Middle East
Explores the geopolitical environment of the Middle East and its interaction with business. This course integrates the cultural impact on trade via governments, economics systems and local labor. 4 cr.

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MET AD 773 International Business Simulation
Prereq: MET AC 630 and FI 631. Through the use of an international business simulation, students develop the ability to manage in the shifting international environment by integrating finance, strategy, and marketing skills to expand their company globally. By selling, exporting, or manufacturing in up to fourteen countries the simulation is intended to provide the student with a "real life" approach to international expansion, environmental stability, inflation and currency issues, financial operations as well as international sales and manufacturing issues. The objective of the course is to offer an overview of the factors affecting global business operations in a stimulating learning environment that is enjoyable and challenging. Intensive course. 4 cr.

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MET AD 893 Politics, Public Relations and Public Policy: The Boston Harbor Clean Up
Offers a unique investigation of how business, advocate groups, environmentalists and government can affect the outcome of large projects through negotiation, regulatory process and interaction. Students will gain insights into the legal, social, environmental and historical context that led to the billion dollar twenty year project that took the Boston Harbor from a sewage infested environment to a swimmable national park. The instructor, Mr. Berman, has served as communication director and spokesman for Save the Harbor/Bay for nearly ten years. He is one of the region's foremost experts on the restoration as well as the flora and fauna of the Harbor area. Intensive course. 4 cr.

This course was featured in the BU Bridge: Learning about the Boston Harbor Cleanup from the waterway’s eyes, ears, and mouthpiece.

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MET MG 721 International Business Law
Provides the student with an understanding of different legal systems as they relate to international business transactions. The course builds the analytical skills required to evaluate legal processes, law, and legislation-related events in international business dealings. 4 cr.

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School of Management

UNDERGRADUATE COURSES

Non-SMG Boston University degree candidates: Permission is required for SMG courses. Students should go to the SMG Undergraduate Program Office for permission. For more information, contact the SMG Undergraduate Program Office at 617-353-2650.

Visiting students can register online, by mail, or in person at the Summer Term office.

SMG students should register via the Student Link.

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SMG IM 345 International Management Environment
Prereq: CAS EC 101, EC 102, and junior standing. Required for International Management concentrators. Deals with international economic theories and explores the intersection between theory and practice. Determinants of international trade and payments: international trade theory and policy and balance-of-payments accounting. Explores the implications of trade-promoting and trade-inhibiting institutions and practices: WTO, NAFTA, European Union, etc. Introduces cultural, political, and demographic issues for international managers. 4 cr.

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SMG IS 479 Innovating with Information Technology
Prereq: SMG IS 323, junior standing. Surveys the organizational implementation, uses, and impacts of advanced information technology including decision support systems, management support systems, and expert systems. Includes a group project to design and develop a decision support system. 4 cr.

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SMG LA 245 Introduction to Law
Prereq: sophomore standing. Sophomore requirement. This course is designed to provide a broad overview of the American judicial system and fundamental legal issues. The course examines dispute resolution, torts, contracts, criminal law, business organizations, employment law, intellectual property, and international law. The goal is to understand not only the basic rules of law but also the underlying social policies and ethical dilemmas. 4 cr.

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SMG MG 422 Strategy and Policy
Prereq: SMG FE 323, IS 323, MK 323, OM 323, and senior standing. Senior requirement. SMG MG 422 is only offered for students graduating in September 2008. Provides students with a powerful set of tools which will prepare them to analyze, formulate, and implement business unit and corporate-level strategy with the aim of attaining sustainable competitive advantage. MG 422 adopts the perspective of the general manager, challenging student knowledge in each functional area in the effort to create integrative strategies that serve the needs of shareholders, as well as other stakeholders inside and outside the company. The course includes conceptual readings, which elucidate the fundamental concepts and frameworks of strategic management, as well as case analyses, which enable students to apply their knowledge to real-world situations and managerial decisions. The course culminates with a final project, which requires student teams to perform a complete strategic analysis on a public company, considering its industry environment and dynamics, its strategic positioning and internal resources, and proposing a course of action for the firm to respond to its strategic challenges. 4 cr.

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SMG OB 221 The Dynamics of Leading Organizations
Prereq: SMG SM 121/122 or SMG SM 299, sophomore standing. Sophomore requirement. Studies human behavior in organizational settings. Theory and findings from the behavioral sciences are used to analyze case examples from organizations and the student's fieldwork in organizations. Topics include leadership, motivation, groups, and influence. 4 cr.

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SMG SM 101 Introduction to Business
A broad introduction to the nature and activities of business enterprises within the United States economic and political framework. Course content introduces economic systems, essential elements of business organization, production, human resource management, marketing, finance, and risk management. Key objectives of the course are development of business vocabulary and a fundamental understanding of how businesses make money. 4 cr.
This course is intended for non-business majors. It may not be taken by SMG students for credit, nor can it be used by Boston University students toward the Business Administration minor. Non-SMG students may register for this course directly via the Student Link.

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SMG SM 221 Probabilistic and Statistical Decision Making for Management
Prereq: CAS MA 120, SMG SM 121/122 or SMG SM 299, and sophomore standing. Sophomore requirement. Exposes students to the fundamentals of probability, decision analysis, and statistics, and their applications to business. Topics include probability, decision analysis, distributions, sampling, estimation, hypothesis testing, and chi-square. Please note that students may not receive credit for both SMG SM 221 and CAS EC 305. 6 cr.

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SMG SM 222 Modeling Business Decisions and Market Outcomes
Prereq: SMG SM 221, CAS EC 101, and sophomore standing. Sophomore requirement. Examines the use of economic and statistical tools for making business decisions. Topics include optimization (including linear programming), multiple regression, demand modeling, cost modeling, industry analysis (including models of perfect competition, monopoly, and oligopoly), and game theory. The course emphasizes modeling with spreadsheets. 6 cr.

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SMG SM 299 Management as a System (Intensive)
Required of all SMG students who did not enter as September freshmen and complete SMG SM 121/122. Prepares transfer students, from both inside and outside the Boston University community, for downstream coursework with the same level of skills and experience as those who matriculated at SMG from the beginning. Focuses on managerial functions and the relationships between those functions. The integration of perspectives is necessary to ensure that the individual student understands the complexity, challenge, and excitement of modern management in the global organization. Emphasis is placed on analytical skills, written analysis, oral presentation, teamwork, and learning. Students must register for two sections: lecture and discussion. 6 cr.

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SMG SM 411 Charting Your Career Path
Must be taken concurrently with SMG OB 221. The course equips students with tools to become self-aware and market-ready when joining the work force, with a focus on résumé and cover letter development, research techniques, networking tips, and interviewing skills. 0.5 cr.

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Graduate School of Management

GRADUATE COURSES

Candidates for the MBA at Boston University are given first consideration for enrollment in the courses offered by the Graduate School of Management.

Students currently matriculated as candidates for other graduate degrees offered by Boston University (except Metropolitan College), visiting MBA students from other AACSB accredited institutions, and MBA alumni from GSM or another AACSB accredited institution may be granted permission to enroll on a space available basis, provided that they meet criteria established by the School of Management for registration as "cross enrolled students" and the student fills out the appropriate "cross enrollment application." All students must meet the prerequisites established for enrollment in advanced courses.

All registration for Summer Term courses must be done at the School of Management Graduate Programs Office, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, Room 104, before May 19 for classes taking place in the first half of the session, and before July 8 for classes taking place in the second half of the session.

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GSM ES 700 Executive Presentation
A presenter's delivery skills impact the audience's image of the presenter and the clarity of the message being communicated. A combination of lecture, discussion, and hands-on practice and simulation, this course is designed to help you exercise leadership through verbal communication. 1 cr.

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GSM ES 701 Executive Written Communication
This course is a combination of lecture, discussion, and hands-on practice. It is designed to help you exercise leadership through writing and understand how strategies of written communication are an essential aspect of effective management, working relationships in the network era, and overall business strategy. 1 cr.

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GSM ES 711 Career Coaching
Prereq: GSM OB 712/713. For students who want to advance within their current organization or field, this course provides intensive career coaching to support the student in moving along to the next career stage. A combination of professional career coaching and peer coaching are employed. The goal is to help students set career goals and develop a strategy to reach them. 1 cr.

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GSM ES 713 Managing Career Transitions
For students who are looking for a career change, this course will help to assess where students are in their career and what their goals are for the MBA program and beyond. They will do a basic self-assessment: interests, values, and skills. Through networking and other resources, students will do external exploration on the range of career opportunities available and specific areas of work which they might want to pursue. From this they will set career goals and develop an action plan. 1 cr.

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GSM ES 715 Developing Your Career Network
This course helps students improve their networking skills and learn to be more strategic about the selection and deployment of their networks. The focus is not only on the recruiting process, but also how they can develop and maintain their professional networks throughout their careers. 1 cr.

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GSM ES 717 Creating Your Career Marketing Plan
Here the student will learn about a professional portfolio as a way of improving his or her personal brand and marketability. The professional portfolio is the totality of the competencies, experiences, education, and professional identity that a person offers a potential employer. In this course, the student will design and construct his or her unique web-based and/or physical representation of their professional portfolio. 1 cr.

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GSM OB 848 Leadership
Prereq: GSM CD 710 or OB 710/711 or OB 712/713. This course examines the essence of leadership; its relationship to managing; and the behaviors, attitudes and perspectives that distinguish leaders. Leadership is considered in a variety of ways: leadership in crises, at the top, in the middle, and in groups. Case studies, students' past experiences, instruments, and other learning activities provide opportunities for students to assess and develop their leadership talents. 3 or 4 cr.

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GSM OB 860 Managerial Decision-Making
Prereq: GSM CD 710 or OB 710/711 or OB 712/713. This course examines theoretical and practical aspects of decision-making. Using a combination of cases, exercises, and psychological and behavioral instruments, students learn to understand and manage decision making from various perspectives. An emphasis is placed on strategic decisions and crisis decisions in a wide variety of circumstances, including business decisions, personal decisions, and managerial decisions made during several different types of events. There is a detailed analysis of managerial decisions made during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Decisions are analyzed using several models, including rational choice, game theory, organizational and communications structure, context analysis, cognitive mapping, and several psychologically based theories. 3 or 4 cr.

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GSM OM 726 Creating Value Through Operations and Technology
Prereq: GSM OB 712/713, AC 710/711, QM 716/717 (MK 723/724, FE 721/722 recommended). This MBA core course is case-oriented and focuses on topics of use to managers in any environment: process analysis, process improvement, supply chain management, and strategic operations decision-making. The course emphasizes the importance of effectiveness and efficiency and evaluates the potential trade-offs between them. 4 cr.

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GSM OM 855 Project Management
MSMBA students must take GSM OM 855 or IS 885 to fulfill their requirement. Projects are increasingly the way that work gets done in companies of all types and sizes. In this course you will learn the strategic dimensions of project management, including critical aspects of project selection, definition, planning, execution, and monitoring. Concepts and approaches for dealing with complexity, uncertainty, vague mandates, temporary staff, partners, stakeholders, dynamic risk, and time-critical deadlines are emphasized. Cases and readings cover a wide range of industry and organizational contexts. This course requires that students apply these topics and considerations to a real project of their choice either by analysis of publicly available information or direct field study. 3 or 4 cr.

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GSM QM 717 Data Analysis for Managerial Decision-Making
Prereq: GSM OB 712/713. Managers deal with a large amount of information in quantitative form. Effective managers must understand the conditions under which quantitative techniques may be appropriately applied for decision-making. In this course, students develop skills in using the computer to examine and report data. The focus is on deriving meaning from particular data sets, and the use of statistical estimation, hypothesis testing, and regression/correlation analysis in decision-making. 4 cr.

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GSM SP 700 Current Topics in Law and Ethics
This course surveys contemporary issues in selected areas of law and ethics. We introduce pivotal areas of law, so that students begin to anticipate legal problems, analyze how to avoid them, and realize how legal principles can be employed to add value in their chosen fields. The subjects are torts, contracts, employment law, securities regulation and corporate governance. We expect that this overview of a few disciplines will encourage students to explore other legal topics relevant to their business interests. We also offer an analytic structure that enables students to identify ethical issues in business, analyze options, and make choices consistent with their own values. 2 cr.

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GSM SP 751 Competition, Innovation, and Strategy
Prereq: GSM AC 710/711, MK 723/724, OB 712/713, OM 725/726. "Competition, Innovation, and Strategy" is an integrative course designed to capitalize on your understanding of finance, operations management, marketing, and other functional issues. The course draws on a number of academic disciplines, especially economics, organization theory, and sociology, to build a fundamental understanding of how and why some firms achieve and sustain superior performance. We also study why some firms persistently generate returns that are lower than average. The course is analytically focused and requires that you evaluate both the external environment and the internal capabilities of organizations. Corporate diversification and global management are important topics that are also featured. GSM students only. 4 cr.

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GSM SP 861 Emerging Issues in Business Law
This course introduces graduate business students to fundamentals of legal analysis by focusing on timely legal problems of particular interest to business. Students develop familiarity with substantive legal principles and leave the course with the ability to recognize legal issues, discuss them intelligently, and understand why the lawyers seem incapable of giving a simple answer. The course uses lectures to provide a common foundation of knowledge. It is primarily discussion based, using a question and answer format to engage students in the process of legal analysis. Students interested in learning more about the course are welcome to contact Kabrina Chang at kkchang@bu.edu or at 617-353-4154. 3 or 4 cr.

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