Welcome to the University of Illinois at Springfield  
UIS Home Page
Search UIS

Academic Programs and Related Information
Undergraduate Programs
Graduate Programs
Transfer Programs
Online Programs
Non-Degree Programs
Teacher Education
UIS Colleges
Degrees Awarded
Course Schedule
Catalog
Exam Schedule
Admissions
Records and Registration
Financial Assistance
Scholarships
Student Jobs
Internships
Senior Learners
Capital City Center
Peoria Center
Applied Studies Term
Credit for Prior Learning
Xtreme Learning
Housing
Safety and Security
Student Life
Brookens Library
List of Faculty
Office of the Provost

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Image of Students at UIS
UIS Catalog

 

UIS Graduate and Undergraduate Catalog
Academic Year 2005 - 2006

MANAGEMENT
Bachelor of Arts

Faculty Judith Ettinger, Joseph Huff, Marya Leatherwood, Hao Ma, Donald O'Neal, Sangeeta Parameshwar
Associated Faculty  Dyanne Ferk, Daniel J. Gallagher, Richard Judd, Laurel Newman, Mark Puclik
Emeritus Faculty Alfred Arkley, Rodney Dinges, George Gruendel, Donald Vanover, Joe Wilkins

Contact: (217) 206-6712
mgt@uis.edu or www.uis.edu/management/

What you can do with this degree. What our graduates say.What you can do with this degree.What our graduates say.Departmental goals and objectives
The goal of the management program is to develop the critical conceptual and interpersonal skills that are essential to employment in management positions in all types of organizations. In addition to requiring a theoretical foundation, the curriculum provides students with numerous opportunities to integrate and apply these concepts in a variety of situations.

Specific program objectives are to enable students to 1) assess power situations and implement appropriate responses; 2) develop competence and understanding in strategic human resource development, including human resource planning, recruitment, selection, orientation, training, career development, performance appraisal, compensation, incentives, union-management relations, ethics, diversity, and succession planning; 3) acquire knowledge of theories and applications of organizational change, and recognize appropriate developmental strategies for leading change; and 4) acquire knowledge of the process that leads to the organization of people and other resources most effectively.

Advising
New students must contact the department for initial advising to plan a program of study that reflects their interests and satisfies degree requirements.

The Bachelor's Degree
The bachelor of arts in management prepares students to become organizational leaders, in the sense that today's organizations need leaders at all levels. The program philosophy is based on the premise that organizational leaders do more than just manage. They understand that success, for individuals as well as organizations, is largely based on how effective they are in developing people and that organizational success requires leaders who know how to coach, mentor, and facilitate, rather than simply monitor and control.

Leaders in business, not-for-profit, and governmental organizations face similar problems and challenges and thus need the same core of leadership knowledge and skills to be effective. Therefore, this degree is designed to develop critical conceptual and interpersonal skills for successful performance in all types of organizations.

Entrance requirements
All departments in the College of Business and Management require foundation knowledge in accounting, economics, mathematics, statistics, and the behavioral sciences. UIS courses that satisfy the foundation knowledge requirements include:

ACC 211 Introduction to Financial Accounting and
ACC 212 Introduction to Managerial Accounting or
ACC 311 Administrative Uses of Accounting
ECO 313 Statistics for Business and Economics
MAT 113 Business Calculus or other calculus or finite
   math equivalent
ECO 201 Introduction to Microeconomics and
ECO 202 Introduction to Macroeconomics or
ECO 315 Economics for Administration
Behavioral science course (psychology, sociology, etc.) 

Coursework equivalent to the above will be accepted on approval by the adviser.

Degree requirements
A student must complete 60 semester hours of upper-division coursework to earn a B.A. in management.

College Core 18 Hours
(Required of all undergraduate College of Business and BUS 302 Principles of Financial Management 3 Hrs.
BUS 312 Principles of Marketing 3 Hrs.
BUS 322 Principles of Operations Management  3 Hrs.
MGT 310 Managing Organizational Behavior 3 Hrs.
MIS 352 Principles of Management Information Systems 3 Hrs.
*MGT 488 Strategic Management and Leadership 3 Hrs.

*Prerequisite: All college and management core for management majors. See MGT 488 course description.

Management Core 16 Hours
MGT 422 Power and Negotiation 4 Hrs.
MGT 431 Human Resource Management 4 Hrs.
MGT 441 Organization Development 4 Hrs.
MGT 461 Organization Theory 4 Hrs.
General electives 14 Hrs.
University requirements (AST, PACs, or LSCs) 12 Hrs.
Total 60 Hrs

Lower-division and transfer credit is not given for management core courses.

MGT 310 Managing Organizational Behavior is a prerequisite for the program core courses. MGT 488 Strategic Management and Leadership is the program's capstone (closure) course, which may only be taken after a student has completed all other core courses. Management majors must earn a grade of C (2.00) or better in every management core course to enroll in the capstone course and to graduate. If a student earns a lower grade, he or she may repeat the course only once.