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King College > Academics > Schools >
School of Business > Masters
of Business Administration > About the Program
About the Program
The primary goal of the Master of Business Administration program at King
College is to prepare students to be effective strategic leaders and managers.
The goal is to assist students to directly integrate management research,
theoretical constructs, skills abilities, and ethical practices within their own
contemporary-professional situation. The primary emphasis of the MBA program at
King College is directed towards managing for quality results. The MBA
curriculum adopts and implements three creative components: a cohort-based
learning model, a fully integrated curriculum, and a transformational learning
experience for personal and professional skill development.
The Professional MBA program at King College is a non-traditional program
that serves adults who have completed their Bachelor’s degree and who normally
possess significant work experience. The MBA program is a 30-hour program for
students who possess a baccalaureate degree in business and a 36-hour program
for students with a non-business baccalaureate degree.
Program Outcomes
MBA program graduates will be prepared to meet the following competency
outcomes:
- Manage in a multitude of organizations, whether products or service based,
for-profit or not-for-profit, utilizing advanced management knowledge,
philosophy, skills, and theory.
- Apply a global, “holistic,” and systems-oriented approach to managing that
incorporates organizational behavior and theory; leadership; strategy;
marketing; accounting; ethics; quantitative methods; economic and financial
analysis; and decision-making.
- Lead and serve with integrity and moral responsibility.
- Think critically about the domestic, global, and multicultural perspectives
associated with management and to assess how such perspectives reflect a dynamic
worldview that embraces the highest standards of ethical practice.
- Grow in an environment that enables knowledge to be acquired that enriches
spiritual, intellectual, and professional development.
- Synthesize intellectual endeavors and management skills in a rapidly changing
environment.
- Continue a life-long love of learning.
This program is different from a traditional program in several respects:
- Cohort Structure. Students are enrolled in a small group (usually
16-20 in size) that remains together as a cohort for the entire 19-month
program.
- Accelerated Pace. The students are enrolled in only one course at a
time in their major and attend class only one night per week. Courses are
typically completed in five to eight weeks. Each weekly class session is four
hours long. Three factors make it possible for the program to function
effectively at an accelerated pace:
- the common goal orientation of the students;
- the cohesiveness and continuity of the cohort structure, and
- the participative, pedagogical teaching methodology, which assumes the
students are self-directed, goal oriented, and interested in applied learning.
- Applied Learning. Throughout the modular course work, students are
required to integrate theory and academic content with knowledge from their
work experiences. Evaluation of students’ progress is based not only on
evidence of their grasp of content but also upon their reflections about the
application of the content in their workplace.
- Participative Methodology. The primary role of the instructor in
the non-traditional Master and Bachelor programs is that of facilitator. The
lecture approach is used only in a limited way. Students are expected to spend
15 to 20 hours each week acquiring information from textbooks, web-enhanced
activities, and work-related assignments. Class time is given over, largely,
to the processing of information. The teacher functions as a facilitator in a
learner-centered rather than a teacher-centered environment.
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