Program Details

BBA General Management
Marian University
08/27/2000
The General Management major examines differing approaches to management and explains skills and activities utilized by managers in fulfilling their functions. Topics include leadership, power, decision-making, policy formation, and organizational structure and change. Emphasis is on the management function in an organizational context.

This program is offered

Day before classes start.
We have a career services center that can help with resumes and job internviews
We have professional tutors for math, science, and English.

Drop before first class 100% refund Length of class Amount of refund 7 weeks or longer: 1st week 100% 2nd week 100% After 2nd week None 3 to 6 weeks: 1st week 100% After 1st week None 2 week Winterim: 1 day 100% Day 2-14 none

Program Enrollments and Completions
19
N/A
N/A (0%)
N/A (0%)
Employment Outcomes (Completions Only)
N/A (0%)
N/A
N/A
N/A (0%)
N/A

PLEASE NOTE:

If there are fewer than eight enrollments in the training program, only the "Enrollments" number will be displayed; all other data is hidden in order to help protect the students' identities. The "Employment Outcomes" are calculated using information from Wisconsin's Unemployment Insurance Wage database. Most employers are required to report certain employment information to the State of Wisconsin, including quarterly wage information for their employees. Students whose information could not be verified in this database are excluded from these outcomes. If a "0" shows for any of these outcomes, it means that none of the students' information could be verified.

MAKING SENSE OF THE EMPLOYMENT OUTCOMES:

"Average quarterly wages" means the total wages earned in a three-month period by all students who completed the program ("completers"), divided by the total number of completers.

"Median quarterly wages" means all the completers' quarterly wages are placed in order from lowest to highest and then we identify the student's wages in the middle. This information is provided because averages can be greatly influenced by really high and low wage earners.

To estimate monthly wages, divide the quarterly wages by three.


cjschlaefer17@marianuniversity.edu

ccglaeser67@marianuniversity.edu

Bjleonhard98@marianuniversity.edu

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