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The Master of
Accountancy Business Core and The Marketplace
Bruce
K. Behn
The University of Tennessee
Synopsis
The University
of Tennessee Master of Accountancy (MAcc) business core
consists of a four-day orientation and two 3-hour classes,
one course taken each semester. Although these courses are
considered separate for University purposes, they should
be viewed as a continuous sequence. Throughout the fall
semester and the first part of the spring semester the
students undertake a variety of active learning exercises,
within a team-based environment, designed to demonstrate
the "cutting edge" business approaches. Students
are exposed to the assessment and delivery of customer
value, continuous system improvement, statistical process
control, human resource management, the role of quality in
competitive organizations, performance measurement, and
overall corporate strategy. In the spring semester, the
business core culminates with a very intensive business
simulation, the Marketplace. The focus of this computer
business simulation is to place the students in a very
realistic business setting where the students run a
company for two years in compressed time using the skills
developed in the business core. All of this material is
taught by award winning UT faculty and business leaders in
an integrated fashion exposing accounting students to
cutting edge business approaches, ideas and strategies.
The objectives
of the business core are two-fold. First, the business
core (and its activities) are designed to help the
students think "out of the box" and to become
better business advisors. Second, this class helps
students gain a better understanding of the "big
business picture" and how accounting information can
assist management in these important business endeavors.
Businesses are requiring accounting students to provide
value-added services beyond traditional accounting needs
and the business core assists in this development.
In addition to
these business skills, the business core emphasizes the
personal growth of the students as well as the development
of their teamwork skills. Students participate in a number
of team building exercises, synthesis projects, and oral
presentations. Students also receive personal coaching by
participating in assessment exercises, individual
presentation and interviewing coaching, and individual
writing assistance. Business leaders have consistently
expressed that communication skills are the most important
factor in a student's success and the business core helps
develop these skills.
Corresponding
Web Sites
MAcc Lotus Notes Calendar:
http://notes.utk.edu/units/biz/macc/MAccCal.nsf
Marketplace
Homepage:
http://www.outreach.utk.edu/marketplace/
Bruce Behn's
Homepage:
http://web.utk.edu/~behn/home.html
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