Archive for the ‘Curriculum Info’ Category

Announcing Social Entrepreneurship – ENTR 490

Monday, November 16th, 2009

Social entrepreneurship encourages students to address social problems that interest them—from bad food in the college cafeteria, pollution and litter, to clean water and better elementary schools—and to come up with creative innovative solutions which can help alleviate the problem and contribute to the greater good.

The class will draw a diverse groups of students from across the university (from social work, engineering, music business, peace and justice etc.) to discuss the challenges of starting new social ventures. In this class we will use a case study approach to introduce students to exemplarity social entrepreneurs who are doing great good through value creation and trade. The course will use these cases to expose students to useful theories and frameworks that can illuminate our approach to social entrepreneurship. The course will also work closely with local social entrepreneurship foundations to create internship and project opportunities for students to work within local Twin Cities social ventures.

Social entrepreneurship is a phenomenon that captured the public imagination over the last decade. The movements have resulted from an increasing willingness and desire to blur three traditionally separate areas of economic activity: private for-profit organizations, private non-profit organizations, and public and governmental institutions. Rather than focusing on the structural differences between these sectors, social entrepreneurship focuses on the underlying needs that are unmet in our society and encourages creative innovative solutions regardless of how the institutions, which provide solutions, are financially structured. Second. Social entrepreneurship places certain normative questions, which are often neglected in conventional business courses, at the center of inquiry, such as, “What is the human purpose of the venture” “What role do the personal values of the entrepreneur play?” In particular the course will take an approach, based on Catholic social teaching, that structures social entrepreneurship around four moral goods that a venture can help create: good products and services, good community of relations, good altruism, and good entrepreneurial character. Prerequisite: junior standing

Confused about DSCI?

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Hello Business Students!
Welcome back to UST!
I just wanted to clear up some confusion about the required DSCI class for all business majors. If you have taken the BUSN 201 class, then the DSCI you need is 301. If you haven’t taken BUSN 201, that means you’re in the new curriculum and you need to take DSCI 310. Please contact your advisor in 128 McNeely Hall if you have questions about that or any other requirement in the Opus College of Business.

Questions about Accounting?

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

You may have questions about how the beginning accounting courses have changed this fall. If you have taken or are taking BUSN 201, you might be looking for ACCT 205 as your next business course. That course is now gone and has become two, ACCT 210 (financial accounting) and 215 (managerial accounting). Since those of you who completed BUSN 201 have only planned for one accounting course, ACCT 210 (financial) will fulfill your requirement unless you’re planning to major in accounting, in which case you need to take both ACCT 210 and ACCT 215. If you have any questions about this or any other business classes, please contact your advisor in the Opus College of Business.