2019-20 College of Liberal Arts [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Business Management Major
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Meet the Faculty
The Business Management major goes beyond business as usual. With an emphasis on sustainability and social responsibility, the Business Management major provides a solid foundation in business theory and practice, entrepreneurship, and innovation. This program prepares you to lead transformational change across a variety of business types. It enables you to learn responsible approaches to business management; develop business acumen that emphasizes innovation, values, sustainability, and social responsibility; and become empowered for success with your education, career, and life. A Business Management minor is also offered to complement a major in any discipline.
The Business Management program is grounded in Rollins’ commitment to educate students for global citizenship and responsible leadership, preparing graduates to pursue meaningful lives and productive careers. The Business Management program is anchored in the Rollins values of Excellence, Innovation, and Community and the AACSB-International values of Innovation, Impact, and Engagement. The Business Management program provides opportunities for students to develop a strong set of basic business skills combined with an understanding of current economic, political, cultural, and environmental issues consistent with the Carnegie Foundation’s (2012) definition of the purpose of liberal learning “to enable students to make sense of the world and their place in it, preparing them to use knowledge and skills as a means toward responsible engagement with the life of their times.”
Key themes of the Business Management program are
- The Primacy of the Triple Bottom Line (TBL) in decision making
- Economic growth and development,
- Social responsibility and ethics, and
- Environmental sustainability.
- Contemporary theories, practices, content, and applications in business from the Common Body of Knowledge (CBK)
- The global, ethical, responsible, economic, social, environmental, legal, and technological implications of course content
- Problem solving through analysis, critical thinking, creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship through classwork and community engagement
- Applied liberal arts skills (analytic, reflective, and strategic thinking; problem solving; legal and ethical reasoning, quantitative reasoning; and effective communication)
- Leadership, interpersonal communication, coordination, cooperation, conflict resolution, teamwork, and team building
- Application of information technology skills for research, composition, communication, calculation, and presentation
- Broad global and strategic perspectives on contemporary business, social, and environmental issues
- Reflective examination of self in relation to the global and local communities, and to the diversity of people with whom they will work
- Application of knowledge through experiential learning opportunities (internships, service learning, community engagement, business projects, and case studies)
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