Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St. Mary's College of Maryland, known for liberal arts, just introduced a business program. I think about your question.
Washington College
Salisbury University
McDaniel College
These are more established programs in state. Maybe even Loyola, but that has a different vibe from the others(even Salisbury).
St. Mary's (like Towson and Salisbury) is in state for Maryland, and St. Mary's plays up the liberal arts aspect, critical thinking skills, etc. that goes along with practical knowledge. But lots of colleges do that, and Loyola is well known for its foundation in humanities.
Anonymous wrote:Is it a good or bad idea to go a school that only just launched a program in your intended major? Potentially bad: no alumni, no track record, you're the guinea pig? Potentially good: More attention, more energy? And if a student were choosing between a higher ranked school with a brand new major in her area of study or a lesser ranker school with an established major in her area of study, is one option clearly better or is it a toss-up? My dc may be facing this situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St. Mary's College of Maryland, known for liberal arts, just introduced a business program. I think about your question.
Washington College
Salisbury University
McDaniel College
These are more established programs in state. Maybe even Loyola, but that has a different vibe from the others(even Salisbury).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St. Mary's College of Maryland, known for liberal arts, just introduced a business program. I think about your question.
I have an MBA from a top 20 school.
Business programs are fairly easy to start.
The core classes are widely taught in academia and lower ranked schools often will use instructors who are practitioners and Master's Degree holders who are not PhD academics.
The core classes are grounding but not terribly difficult.
Harder/more mathematical:
Statistics
Operations Management
Finance
Business Economics/Microeconomics
Accounting
Typical Liberal Arts difficulty:
Organizational Behavior
Business Communications
Marketing
International Business
Project classes
I would review the bios/resumes of the Dean and the faculty to help decide.
I believe that good teachers don't need to have PhD's. But then they do need solid work experience. I had good teachers who were not PhDs.
I switched out of a BBA program because I planned to get an MBA and BBA core courses are redundant. I've taken several core courses twice, once at BBA and once at MBA school. The courses marked "harder" above are ones where it might be trickier to get good faculty at a small school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St. Mary's College of Maryland, known for liberal arts, just introduced a business program. I think about your question.
I have an MBA from a top 20 school.
Business programs are fairly easy to start.
The core classes are widely taught in academia and lower ranked schools often will use instructors who are practitioners and Master's Degree holders who are not PhD academics.
The core classes are grounding but not terribly difficult.
Harder/more mathematical:
Statistics
Operations Management
Finance
Business Economics/Microeconomics
Accounting
Typical Liberal Arts difficulty:
Organizational Behavior
Business Communications
Marketing
International Business
Project classes
I would review the bios/resumes of the Dean and the faculty to help decide.
I believe that good teachers don't need to have PhD's. But then they do need solid work experience. I had good teachers who were not PhDs.
I switched out of a BBA program because I planned to get an MBA and BBA core courses are redundant. I've taken several core courses twice, once at BBA and once at MBA school. The courses marked "harder" above are ones where it might be trickier to get good faculty at a small school.
Anonymous wrote:St. Mary's College of Maryland, known for liberal arts, just introduced a business program. I think about your question.
Anonymous wrote:St. Mary's College of Maryland, known for liberal arts, just introduced a business program. I think about your question.
+1Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St. Mary's College of Maryland, known for liberal arts, just introduced a business program. I think about your question.
Then not good. If a new STEM major based upon new developments, then OK
Anonymous wrote:St. Mary's College of Maryland, known for liberal arts, just introduced a business program. I think about your question.
Anonymous wrote:Is it a good or bad idea to go a school that only just launched a program in your intended major? Potentially bad: no alumni, no track record, you're the guinea pig? Potentially good: More attention, more energy? And if a student were choosing between a higher ranked school with a brand new major in her area of study or a lesser ranker school with an established major in her area of study, is one option clearly better or is it a toss-up? My dc may be facing this situation.