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Click on the name of an online course offered at Golden Gate University to view the detailed information; you can also find out about the college or university offering the course by clicking on "School's Profile". |
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Name (Section Id) |
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Program |
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Degree |
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Name of College, University |
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School's Profile |
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Federal Income Taxation of Trusts and Estates (TA 344) |
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Accounting |
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Golden Gate University |
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Analyzes taxation of trusts and estates and their creators, beneficiaries and fiduciaries, including computation of distributable net income and taxable net income, taxation of simple and complex trusts, operation of throwback rules, computation of income in respect of a decedent, preparation of the last return for a decedent and the returns of trusts and estates from inception through termination. Prerequisites: TA 318 and TA 329. |
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Federal Tax Procedure (TA 319) |
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Accounting |
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Golden Gate University |
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Examines federal tax procedure at the administrative level and in litigation; organization of the I.R.S.; legal and practical aspects of Treasury regulations; administrative rulings; closing and compromise agreements; deficiency and jeopardy assessments; waivers; refund claims; mitigation of statute of limitations; pretrial, trial and appellate processes; tax collections; civil penalties; and the rights and privileges of the taxpayer. Corequisites TA 318 and TA 329. |
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Federal Taxation (ACCTG 360) |
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Accounting |
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Golden Gate University |
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Studies federal taxation emphasizing taxation of individuals. This is a comprehensive course that covers taxable income, gross income exclusions and inclusions, capital gains, depreciation, business and itemized deductions, personal exemptions, passive activity losses, tax credits and the various methods of accounting. This course may not be taken if ACCTG 108A has been completed. Prerequisite: ACCTG 1A. Corequisite: ACCTG 100A. |
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Financial Management (FI 100) |
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Business |
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Golden Gate University |
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Introduces financial analysis and management in terms of its most important functions: raising funds at minimum cost and risk and allocating those funds among competing short- and long-term uses. Topics include financial statement analysis, discounted cash flow analysis, financial markets and interest rate determination, stock and bond valuation models, capital budgeting methodologies and working capital management. Concepts of risk and return, cost of capital calculation and capital structure are introduced. Prerequisites: ACCTG 1A, ACCTG 1B, and MATH 30. |
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Financial Markets and Institutions (ECON 380) |
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E-Commerce & E-Business |
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Golden Gate University |
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Examines the transfer of funds in the economic system through financial intermediaries. Topics include the flow of funds, capital markets, debt, liquidity, nature of money in the US economy, the innovations and interrelationships of institutions within the changing financial services industry, governmental regulation and agencies, and the impact of public policy on economic transfers. Prerequisite: ECON 202. |
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Financial Modeling (FI 307) |
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Business |
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Golden Gate University |
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Presents the theory and practice of financial management with emphasizing computer-based modeling and forecasting. Uses spreadsheet and other software products to analyze the impact of financial decisions related to financial statement analysis, cash budgeting, cost of capital determination, capital budgeting and capital structure choices. The course covers a variety of techniques, such as sensitivity and scenario analysis, optimization methods, Monte Carlo simulation, regression and time-series analysis and neutral network models. Prerequisite: FI 300. |
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Financial Strategy and Value Creation (FI 320) |
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Business |
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Golden Gate University |
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Demonstrates the use of competitive strategy to create shareholder value, industry attractiveness, firm-based resources and competitive advantage in a variety of settings, including technology-intensive and mature industries. Introduces the use of transaction cost economics and the capital-asset pricing model to analyze vertical integration, diversification and global strategies. Extensively uses case studies to build strategy development skills. Prerequisite: FI 300. |
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Global Supply Chain Management (OP 329) |
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Business |
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Golden Gate University |
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Studies the latest applications of logistics and supply chain management to global operations and covers procurement, transportation, warehousing and storage, order processing, packaging, information services, materials handling and customer service. You will review the organization required to establish an export/import operation. Also, you will examine intermodalism, third party utilization, documentation requirements and cargo clearance procedures. You will become familiar with logistics implications of Economic Trading Zones and governmental requirements. Upon completion of the course, you will be able to actively contribute to the management of a global logistics system. Prerequisite: OP 323 or approval of the program director. |
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Globalization from Marco Polo to McDonalds (HIST 88) |
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Computer Science |
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Golden Gate University |
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Looks at the history of globalization from the perspective of European, Asian, African, and American civilizations, from the beginnings of long-distance ocean navigation to the present era of satellite communication and cyberspace. Examines economic, social, and cultural effects of exploration, trade, migration and settlement, technological development, and cultural exchange. Prerequisite or corequisite: ENGL 1A. |
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Graduate Research Project in Public Management (EMPA 396) |
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Public Services |
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Golden Gate University |
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Presents the capstone course taken in the final trimester of the EMPA program. You will undertake a major research project to integrate and synthesize the knowledge and skills acquired in the program. The research project is expected to have practical utility, hopefully in relationship to your organization. |
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Human Resource Management (MGT 173) |
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Business |
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Golden Gate University |
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Surveys the principles and practices in managing personnel; human resource planning, recruiting, selection, training; development of personnel policies; government regulation including EOC, OSHA, wage-and-hour laws; introduces labor relations and collective bargaining. |
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Human Resource Management (MGT 346) |
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Business |
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Golden Gate University |
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Provides an overview of the critical functions and activities of human resource management from the perspective of the general manager. Illustrates the need for an integrated approach towards human resource planning, staffing, training, performance management, compensation and benefits, labor relations and employee separation. Special attention paid to the role of HR in assuring compliance with legal regulation of the employment relationship. |
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Information Systems Planning & Project Control (CIS 380) |
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Information Technology |
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Golden Gate University |
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Centers on planning, estimating and controlling systems projects. Emphasis will be placed on the practical application of management tools and techniques to improve the cost, time and quality areas of systems management. Automated project-management tools and case studies will be used. Prerequisites: ACCTG 201 (or ACCTG 1A and ACCTG 1B), FI 203 (or FI 100), MATH 40, MATH 106 and CIS 302 ( or consent of department chair). |
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Information Technology Systems (CIS 301) |
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Computer Science |
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Golden Gate University |
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Provides a broad survey of information technology in current business conditions. Gives you a basic understanding of the most relevant aspects of information technology. You will also gain an understanding of the differences between a data processing system, a management information system, a decision support system, office automation and an expert system. |
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Integrated Marketing Communications (MKT 305) |
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Marketing |
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Golden Gate University |
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Details |
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Enables you to prepare, present and manage an integrated marketing communications plan using a blend of advertising, personal selling, sales promotion, public relations, direct marketing, Internet techniques and related marketing tools. Through case studies and practical exercises, you will learn how to reach appropriate market targets in the most cost-efficient and measurable way. Prerequisite: MKT 100 or MKT 300 or MKT 350. |
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Intermediate Accounting II (ACCTG 100B) |
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Accounting |
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U |
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Golden Gate University |
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Details |
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Continues intermediate accounting with an emphasis on current pronouncements and practical applications. You will read, discuss and implement the most current accounting requirements as prescribed in the FASB statements and other current accounting pronouncements. Topics include plant and equipment, intangible assets, current liabilities, long-term debt, stockholders equity, investments, and problem solving using computer spreadsheets. Prerequisite: ACCTG 100A. |
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International Business and Strategy (MGT 204) |
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Business |
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Golden Gate University |
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Examines common trade theories and how these affect government policy and regulation. Considers alternative strategies for the conduct of multinational and global business. Explores the different international configurations of business-government -society relationship systems and how these affect international business strategies. Considers policy, strategy and management challenges in marketing, finance, production and personnel faced by multinational and global corporations. |
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International Mergers, Acquisitions and Joint Venture (TA 350E) |
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Business |
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Golden Gate University |
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Analyzes the US tax issues relating to both inbound and outbound mergers, acquisitions, and joint ventures, including taxable acquisitions and dispositions, joint ventures, tax-free acquisitive exchanges and reorganizations, and distributions and divisive reorganizations. Prerequisites: TA 350A and TA 350B. |
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Introduction to International Business (MGT 179) |
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Business |
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Golden Gate University |
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Examines environmental, economic, political and social constraints on doing business abroad; effects of overseas business investments on domestic and foreign economies; foreign market analysis and operational strategy of a firm; management problems and development potential of international operations. |
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Introduction to Page Design and HTML (CIS 360) |
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Computer Science |
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Golden Gate University |
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Teaches web page creation beginning with the basic building block of contemporary web page design*HTML, or Hypertext Markup Language. You will create a collection of web pages and mount them on a server. The course will be conducted in a lab and will provide you with substantial hands-on experience. Included will be image processing, designing for impact and readability, registering with search engines, using frames, making image maps, HTML conversion techniques and an overview of Photoshop techniques for the web. |
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