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Doctor
of Business Administration
DBA Course Descriptions
Mgt 310. Analytical Techniques in Research. This course covers
the principal techniques employed in conducting social science
research. Topics include the design of experiments, survey
research, measures of association, parametric statistics, nonparametric
statistics, trend analysis, and contingency table analysis.
Students will read scholarly articles employing these techniques
to better understand how they are used in practice. (6 credit-hours)
Mgt 320. Philosophical Foundations of Knowledge and
Research. This course is an overview of knowledge, knowledge acquisition,
and the research process. The focus will be the link between
research, theory, and practice. Topics include the nature
of scientific revolutions, epistemology, and phenomenology.
Students will review seminal thinkers such as Kuhn and
Popper.
Mgt 350. Management as a Behavioral Science. Management
theory has roots in the behavior sciences, including psychology,
sociology, anthropology, and economics. This course will
examine the contributions of the behavior sciences to management
and vice versa. A special focus will be attempts to design
organizations based on behavioral science principles. (6
credit-hours)
Mgt 355. Evolution of Management Thought. This course provides
an in-depth review of managerial thought and practice throughout
history. Topics include an investigation of how management
thinking has reflected changing social, economic, cultural,
and political circumstances organizations have faced. Theories
of management will be studied from the times of Lao Tzu to
the present.
Mgt 358. Current Issues in Management. This course provides
a critical review of managerial issues facing organizations
today. Students will prepare papers analyzing these issues
and their consequences. Special attention is directed toward
various aspects of the concept of the managerial process
and the roles of businesses in society.
Mgt 359. Managing Modern Business Operations. This course
surveys fundamental principles and issues in managing the
modern business operation. Topics include managing quality,
risks, capacity, processes, personnel, supply-chain, technology,
forecasting, and aggregate planning. The theory of constraints
and techniques of time-boxed and critical-chain scheduling
also are covered. The key concepts of the value chain and
competitive strategies are integrated throughout the course.
Mgt 360. International Management. The focus of this course
is the behaviors and functions required for successful business
management in today’s challenging global environment. Topics
covered include: globalism, social responsibility and ethics,
cultural styles, cross-cultural communication, negotiations,
international alliances, control systems for global operations,
international organizations, cultural shock, diversity, global
labor relations, leadership and motivation in a multicultural
context.
Mgt 365. Economic and Financial Theory. Economic and financial
theories are at the foundation of modern management and business
administration. This course will cover advanced topics in
microeconomics, macroeconomics, and finance that affect domestic
and international firms. Students will compare and contrast
the original works of Nobel Prize winners in economics in
addition to current interpretations.
Mgt 366. Leadership and Ethics. This course presents a review
of the history of management thought regarding leadership
and ethics. Topics include the role of vision, the varying
characteristics of leaders, and organizational values. The
importance of managerial ethics will be addressed, informed
by varying contexts of diverse cultures versus Western ideals.
Mgt 368. Business-Government Relations. Businesses operate
with considerable autonomy but within the constraints of
federal, state, and local government laws and regulations.
Many businesses look to government as a major customer for
their goods and services. This course focuses on the complex
relationships between businesses and governments, including
a review of the legal environment and major trends in law
and policy.
Mgt 395. Technology, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship. This
advanced course reviews the essentials of entrepreneurship,
building on the fundamental concepts of technology and innovation.
Topics covered include: developing entrepreneurial ideas,
market opportunity analysis and marketing planning, financial
planning and financing, logistics and supply-chain, patents
and trademarks, and distribution strategies. The business
cycle, the product life cycle, technology diffusion, and
waves of creative destruction of studied in detail.
Mgt 398. Directed Research and Readings. This doctoral level
research and reading course is provided for students who
have specific interests to be pursued as an independent study,
with the permission and support of a faculty member. This
course may be repeated. (3-9 credit-hours)
Mgt 399. Advanced Research Methods. This course provides
an in-depth examination of advanced techniques that may be
useful in conducting dissertation research, including factor
analysis, discriminant analysis, multidimensional scaling,
MANOVA, sampling theory, and experimental design. (6 credit-hours)
Mgt 420. Special Topics in Research. This course focuses
on the individual student’s area of concentration, their
chosen research problems, and issues related to preparing
the dissertation. Topics include the craft of dissertation
writing, defining and controlling the scope of problem statements,
conducting effective and efficient research, and selecting
research analytical methods that are reliable and valid.
This course may be repeated. (3-9 credit-hours)
Mgt 498. Directed Readings and Research. This dissertation-research
course is provided for students to continue their dissertation
proposal research that began with Mgt 420. This course may
be repeated.
Mgt 499. Dissertation Research. This course is limited to
students who have received approval of their dissertation
proposal and been promoted to the status of doctoral candidate.
The product of this independent work is a dissertation
that is thorough, succinct, well-reasoned, professionally
presented, and defensible. This course may be repeated.
(3-9 credit-hours)
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