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Transportation & Logistics Bachelor of Business Administration

Program Mission Statement

The Transportation & Logistics curriculum is designed to provide students with the content of the Logistics discipline and its interrelationships with other business functions within and across firms, as well as with supply chain management. Accordingly, the curriculum and its interaction with, and support from, logistics professionals in the business community provide students with the knowledge, skills and experience to be successful in the rapidly expanding logistics field.

Most important to the efficacy of the 海角社区Transportation and Logistics Program is the curriculum it offers. The content and quality the curriculum offers, qualifies Transportation and Logistics graduates for the ASTL certification (CTL) blanket waiver, a designation given to only 28 programs nationwide. The 海角社区curriculum emphasizes the perspective of logistics role as an integrated part of Supply Chain Management. Students are exposed to courses in information systems, quantitative methods, transportation, warehouse management, distribution, international logistics, logistics management, subsystems, and Capstone in Supply Chain Management. In addition, students are strongly encouraged to complete a semester long internship with a company engaged in logistics and/or supply chain management. The internship provides first–hand experience in applying their education to problems and issues confronting logistics firms.

In addition to the College BBA core requirements, the major requires successful completion of 21 semester hours are required. Grade of C or better is required in all major coursework. ISM4011 Intro Management Info Systems; MAN4550 Introduction to Mngmt Science; TRA3035 Foundations of Transportation; TRA4155 Supply Chain Management; TRA4202 Logistics Systems Management; TRA4210 Logistics Subsystems Analysis.

Student Learning Outcomes

Graduates will be able:

Content/Discipline-Specific Knowledge/Skills

  • • Students will understand the global economy and recognize the impact of diverse socioeconomic and cultural factors on business operations.
  • Students will acquire knowledge in the major functional areas of business (accounting, economics, management, finance, marketing, and quantitative business analysis) and understand the interrelationships among them.
  • Students will demonstrate a foundational knowledge in the principles of transportation and logistics.

Communication Skills

Students will communicate effectively in both oral and written formats

Critical Thinking Skills

Students will identify and reconcile ethical issues in decision making.

Assessment Approaches

The Coggin College of Business operates a college-wide strategy to assess its four learning objectives. Each of the 7 programs of study (housed in 4 departments) has adopted these as its learning objectives, which links to the university's three broad learning categories. While each of these objectives is differentially emphasized in the various programs of study, they are common to the core body of knowledge provided to all students majoring in a sub-field of business. The college utilizes a multi-year time horizon to assess alternating objectives.  This time horizon corresponds to the AACSB (re)accreditation cycle.

Functional Business Content Knowledge (objective 1) is assessed via the Major Field Test (MFT) in Business, an instrument provided by the Educational Testing Service (ETS).  It is administered in each student's last term in his/her program of study via the capstone policy course (MAN 4720).   Functional Business Content Knowledge is measured by the overall score (out of 200), as well as the score on each of the following assessment indicators (sub-scores): accounting, economics, management, finance, marketing, and quantitative analysis.

Global Awareness  (objective 2) is assessed via the Major Field Test (MFT) in Business, an instrument provided by the Educational Testing Service (ETS).  It is administered in each student's last term in his/her program of study via the capstone policy course (MAN 4720). Certain questions are designated as “International Issues” and ETS provides a subscore to reflect performance on these questions. Global Awareness is measured by  the international assessment indicator sub-score (% of international issues questions answered correct).

Effective Communication (objective 3) includes both oral and written communication. The oral communication portion of this objective is assessed in the new required ENC 3202 Professional Communication for Business course. Students are required to give a 5-10 minute presentation (with time for questions) on a business proposal and are assessed using a Speaking & Listening Rubric. Oral communication is measured by overall oral presentation score (out of 4) as well as the score in each area of oral communication (Fluency, Listening, Movement, Word Choice, & Inflection).  The written communication portion of this objective is assessed in the capstone policy course (MAN 4720). Student are required to write a brief essay in response to a case and are assessed using the 海角社区Writes Self-Talk Rubrics #1-5. Written Communication is measured by the overall writing score (out of 4) as well as the score in each area of written communication (Thesis/Central Idea, Paragraph Coherence, Evidence, Grammar, and Stylistic Clarity).

Ethical Reasoning and Decision Making (objective 4) is  assessed in the capstone policy course (MAN 4720). Student are required to write a brief essay in response to a case and are assessed using the 海角社区Writes Self-Talk Rubric #6 that  evaluates ethical awareness and critical thinking. Ethical Reasoning and Decision Making is measured by the Ethical Awareness and Critical Thinking score (out of 4).

Assessment mechanisms may change over time.