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The Importance of a
Business Program for Engineering Majors
The Integrated Engineering and Business Practices Program gives students
what they term "a competitive advantage." Whether learning
how to write a more effective resume or developing better public speaking
and presentation skills, students in these courses have been very vocal
and very excited about their experiences. "I took the first course
in the first semester of my junior year," says Nikolas Larsen, a
chemical engineering major,
"and enrolled in the second course as a senior." By December
2003, more than half of the University's engineering graduates -- Classes
2002, 2003, and 2004 -- had taken the fundamentals course. Like Larsen,
many of the students who took the first course enrolled in the second.
Why? According the Larsen and Shana Blair, a student in the Department
of Computer Science and Engineering, the courses provide management concepts,
knowledge, and skills not typically introduced in undergraduate engineering
curricula. "I have always believed that an engineer wishing to end up
in a management position should have some kind of background in business,"
says Blair. "These courses helped me become more confident in myself
and in my understanding of business practices so that I can offer extremely
competitive technical and business skills to a company. ... I can be
a more valuable asset to my company." |
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