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Analysis of survey data examining how undergraduate major affects graduates’ perceptions of the relevance of ECON 200 to their professional careers, including descriptive statistics and multiple hypothesis tests.
Year:
2012–2013
Institution:
[University Name]
Course:
BUAD 300
Type of Document:
Academic report
Author:
Not specified
Target Audience:
Business students and faculty
Majors Analyzed:
Accounting, Finance, Management, Marketing
Sample Size:
160 students
Statistical Methods:
ANOVA, Chi-square test, Kruskal-Wallis test, t-test, Mann-Whitney test
Data Source:
Alumni surveys
Reference:
Anderson, D., Sweeney, D., Williams, T., Camm, J., Cochran, J. (2014), Statistics for Business and Economics, 12th Edition, Cengage South-Western, Mason, OH
Price: 8 / 10 USD
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The product description is provided for reference. Actual content and formatting may differ slightly.
Year:
20XX-20YY
Region / city:
Denmark
Thematic:
Development Cooperation, Project Management
Document Type:
Project Document
Organization / Institution:
Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA), Danida
Author:
Not specified
Target Audience:
Grantee, Project Partner, MFA officials
Period of validity:
20XX-20YY
Approval Date:
Not specified
Date of Changes:
Not specified
Course:
BUAD 301
Term:
Spring 2018
Location:
JFF 414, USC
Professor:
Pai-Ling Yin
Office Hours:
By appointment
Email:
[email protected]
Course Duration:
Mondays & Wednesdays, 4:00p – 5:20p
Units:
3
Prerequisites:
None
Credit Duplication:
BAEP 423, BUAD 450, & BUAD 451
Note:
Course Description
Year:
2014
Region / City:
Los Angeles
Subject:
Business Communication
Document Type:
Course Syllabus
Institution:
University of Southern California
Instructor:
Daylanne Markwardt, Ph.D.
Target Audience:
Undergraduate students
Period of Action:
Spring 2014
Approval Date:
Not specified
Modification Date:
Not specified
Year:
2016
Region / City:
Los Angeles, USA
Subject:
Accounting, Managerial Accounting
Document Type:
Course Syllabus
Institution:
University of Southern California
Author:
Professor Julie W. Suh
Target Audience:
Undergraduate students, business majors
Effective Period:
Spring Semester 2016
Approval Date:
Not specified
Revision Date:
Not specified
Year:
2013
Institution:
University of Southern California, Marshall School of Business
Department:
Management and Organization (MOR)
Course Type:
Syllabus / Academic Course Outline
Instructors:
Kelly Patterson, Tom Cummings, Scott Wiltermuth, Christine El Haddad
Discussion Instructors:
Christopher Bresnahan, Jody Tolan
Course Level:
Undergraduate
Semester:
Fall 2013
Format:
Blended learning (online lectures, discussion sessions, in-person lectures)
Target Audience:
Undergraduate business students
Course Objectives:
Leadership development, organizational behavior understanding, team management skills
Learning Outcomes:
Application of leadership theories, team dynamics, organizational structure and culture, conflict resolution, communication skills
Contact Information:
Provided for all instructors including office, phone, email, and office hours
Year:
2021
Region / City:
Nigeria
Topic:
Education / Examinations
Document Type:
Request Letter
Organization:
Ahmadu Bello University
Author:
Professor Mohammed Ibrahim Sule
Target Audience:
Olubunmi Obadina
Period of Validity:
Next Semester
Approval Date:
27th May 2021
Course:
BUAD 345 Investment Analyses
Instructor:
Dr. Enyang Guo
Assignment:
Project One: Getting Started
Topic:
Buying and Selling Securities
Type:
Mini Project Assignment
Platform:
Stock-Trak
Initial Investment:
$5,000,000
Due Date:
September 23, 2025
Target Audience:
Students enrolled in BUAD 345
Required Materials:
Investment Updates reading (pages 43-45)
Skills Assessed:
Risk tolerance, asset allocation, investment strategy, portfolio management
Course Description:
Introduction to principles and techniques utilized in the financial management of business. Topics to be covered include: interpretation of financial statements, ratio analysis, present value, bond valuation and interest rates, stock valuation, net present value analysis, risk and return, cost of capital, and capital structure. Most class time will be spent on lecture and practice problems.
Year:
2025
Region / City:
Virginia
Theme:
Corporate Finance
Document Type:
Syllabus
Institution:
University of Virginia
Instructor:
C. Dylan McGee
Target Audience:
Students enrolled in ECON 4350
Period of Validity:
Spring 2025
Approval Date:
N/A
Modification Date:
N/A
Year:
2012
Region / City:
United States
Subject:
Economics
Document Type:
Exam
Institution:
University
Author:
Professor Kelly
Target Audience:
Students of Econ 102
Period:
Summer 2012
Date of Approval:
Not specified
Date of Changes:
Not specified
Year:
2015
Region / City:
Madison, Chicago
Topic:
Economics, Education, Externalities, Retirement Plans
Document Type:
Exam
Institution:
University of Wisconsin
Author:
Professor Kelly
Target Audience:
Students in ECON 100 course
Period of Validity:
Spring 2015
Approval Date:
April 14, 2015
Date of Changes:
N/A
Year:
2023/2024
Region / City:
Kuwait
Subject:
International Trade
Document Type:
Course Syllabus
Institution:
Kuwait University
Author:
Dr. Mohammad Alawin
Target Audience:
Students of Economics
Period of Validity:
Spring 2023/2024
Approval Date:
N/A
Modification Date:
N/A
Note:
Year
Topic:
Macroeconomics, Business Cycle
Document Type:
Instructions
Target Audience:
Students of Macroeconomics
Period of Application:
Current
Author:
Joffree Herrera
Course:
ECON 1740
Subject:
American Economic History
Type of document:
Student reflective essay
Educational level:
College
Instructor:
Dr. KT Magnusson
Primary textbook:
American Economic History by Jonathan Hughes and Louis P. Cain
Chapters covered:
5–15, 17–20
Additional reading:
Timeline: The Abolition of the Slave Trade by Andrea Curry
Assessment format:
Online chapter tests (25 questions each)
Time period studied:
1780s–early 20th century
Course:
ECON 424
Lab Number:
1
Instructor:
Eric Zivot
Student:
Chen-wei Chiu
Date:
June 27, 2014
Subject:
Returns Calculations and Data Analysis in R
Software:
R
Data Source:
Yahoo! monthly adjusted closing prices
Company:
SBUX
Data Period:
March 1993 – March 2008
File Referenced:
sbuxPrices.csv; Lab1.xls
Programming Language:
R
Document Type:
University lab assignment with calculations and code
Year:
2024
Institution:
University of Connecticut
Course Title:
International Finance (ECON 3422)
Credits:
3
Format:
In-class
Prerequisite:
ECON 2202
Professor:
Dr. Paul Tomolonis
E-mail:
[email protected]
Office Hours:
By appointment, available before & after class
Classroom:
HuskyCT
Optional Materials:
Open-source and recommended textbooks listed in syllabus
Topics Covered:
International trade finance, foreign exchange markets, balance of payments, capital flows, monetary arrangements
Course Objectives:
Analyze macroeconomic effects on FX, evaluate hedging strategies
Target Audience:
Undergraduate students in Economics
Course Period:
Spring 2024
Document Type:
Syllabus
Language:
English
Year:
2026
Region:
Aotearoa New Zealand
Subject:
Economics, Māori Studies
Document Type:
Course Outline
Institution:
Secondary School / Educational Provider
Audience:
Teachers, Students (Level 2)
Duration:
32 weeks
Assessment Opportunities:
EC2.1 Investigate viewpoints of economic wellbeing, EC2.2 Demonstrate understanding of macroeconomic issues
Learning Framework:
Mātauranga Māori, Ao Māori, Ao Whānui
Key Concepts:
Economic wellbeing, GDP, employment, inequality, Māori values (aroha, whanaungatanga, kotahitanga), mana, Whare Tapa Whā
Delivery Format:
Printed A3, Landscape, Teacher-guided planning
Resources:
YouTube videos, statistical data, Treaty concepts, Māori economic models
Year:
2026
Course:
Econ 301
Type of document:
Exam
Institution:
University (unspecified)
Duration:
1 hour
Total points:
110
Allowed tools:
Calculator (non-programmable, non-phone)
Sections:
Multiple Choice, True/False, Short Answer
Topics:
Consumer choice theory, budget constraints, indifference curves, Giffen goods, Type I and II errors, utility maximization
Target audience:
Undergraduate economics students
Instructions:
Show all work, read questions carefully, print clearly
Year:
2025
Course Term:
Fall
Instructor:
Isaiah Koepsell
Contact Info:
Phone: 507-344-7337, Email: [email protected]
Office Location:
HH 317
Class Schedule:
Monday and Wednesday: 2-4 PM
Institution:
Bethany Lutheran College
Course Type:
Undergraduate Course
Subject:
Macroeconomics
Target Audience:
College students
Prerequisite Knowledge:
None
Course Objectives:
To understand the fundamentals of economics including demand and supply, inflation, unemployment, and monetary policies.
Textbook:
Economics (Ed. 22), McConnell et al.
Learning Resources:
Computer required for assignments and quizzes
Evaluation Methods:
Assignments, quizzes, tests
Grading Scale:
A (93%-100%) to F (0%-59.9%)
Late Work Policy:
20% penalty for late submissions
Make-up Policy:
Must complete quizzes/tests within one week of absence
Attendance Policy:
Maximum of six unexcused absences allowed
Year:
2023
Region / City:
Connecticut
Subject:
Economics
Document Type:
Course Syllabus
Organization / Institution:
University of Connecticut
Instructor:
Professor Remy Levin
Target Audience:
Students enrolled in the course
Prerequisite:
ECON 1200 or 1201; MATH 1071 or 1110 or 1120 or 1125 or 1131 or 1151 or 2141
Period of Effect:
Spring 2023
Approval Date:
January 2023
Date of Changes:
Not specified