Over the 4 years of the degree, including those courses taken in the Diploma, students must complete:
- 17 Core BBA Business Courses
- 9 General Management Major Courses
- 12 General Education Courses
- 2 Elective Courses
Students entering the BBA program with a Business Administration Diploma, (depending on each student's transfer credit), must complete:
5 Core BBA Business Courses:
MGMT 320 Business Statistics II or BUS 307 Business Statistics II
MGMT 410 Global Business Environment
MGMT 420 Operations Management
MGMT 430 Business Plan Development
MGMT 490 Strategic Management
3 Business Major Courses (300/400 level) selected from the following:
MGMT 450 Leadership (3 credits)
MGMT 460 Change Management (3 credits)
MGMT 470 Corporate Social Responsibility (3 credits)
ACCT 306 Auditing (3 credits)*
ACCT 305 Personal & Corporate Income Tax (3 credits)*
ACCT 310 Advanced Financial Accounting (3 credits)*
ACCT 308 Advanced Managerial Accounting (3 credits)*
* Students interested in pursuing a professional accounting designation are recommended to take these courses as prerequisites to entering the professional program.
General Education Courses (12)
• 4 Foundation level courses, one from each cluster
• 4 Second Level courses, one from each cluster
• 4 Third Level courses, from at least two clusters
Students entering the BBA program with a University Transfer Studies Diploma must complete:
MGMT 410 Global Business Environment
MGMT 420 Operations Management
MGMT 430 Business Plan Development
MGMT 490 Strategic Management
The remaining 16 courses must be Co-Listed with MRU and will depend on the courses taken in their University Transfer Studies Diploma. These courses will include General Education, General Management Major, or Elective courses to complete the 4 year requirements. See the MRU BBA
Program Student Advisor at RDC for further information and program planning and for the most current list of Co-Listed courses.
View Course Descriptions
Note on Mount Royal University General Education Requirement
Students in the BBA program are required to meet the general education requirements of Mount Royal University. General Education provides students with the opportunity to build their ability to think critically, develop their communication and mathematical skills, stimulate their capacities for creative, innovative thinking, and enrich their knowledge of the wider social, cultural, and natural worlds in which they live and work.The General Education Program is organized around four thematic clusters which constitute groups of streams of courses:
Numeracy and Scientific Literacy
These courses aim to develop an understanding of the nature and methods of subjects in the natural sciences, health sciences and computer science, as well as providing essential mathematical skills needed for study at the post-secondary level.
Values, Beliefs and Identity
These courses provide the opportunity to critically explore the values, beliefs and ideas that shape human experience, including understandings and meaning expressed through art, music, literature, philosophy and critical thought. There is also opportunity to study the various media through which cultural expression takes place.
Community and Society
Through these courses you will explore the complex intersection of interests and relations that constitute social life - from local community to the globalized network of societies. By studying the interlocking of material, moral, and political factors affecting society at all levels, you will acquire knowledge and skills that help you understand and act in the world in which you are a citizen.
Communication
These courses focus on the development of an undergraduate level of proficiency in written and oral communication across a range of media. They will help you develop a capacity for critical reflection on various media and their uses. Opportunity for study in languages other than English will be available in this thematic cluster.
Students are reminded to seek advising from the MRU BBA Program Student Advisor for program direction and course selection. Failure to follow the individual student program outlined will result in failure to meet the degree graduation requirements.