Programs
The College of Business Administration and Accountancy offers undergraduate and graduate programs.
Undergraduate
- Bachelor of Science in Accountancy (BS Accountancy)
- Bachelor of Science in Business Administration major in:
Graduate
Bachelor of Science in Accountancy (BS Accountancy)
The Bachelor of Science in Accountancy program is based on the Philippine Institute of Certified Public Accountants' 5-year prescribed enhanced curriculum. It aims to produce competent professional accountants capable of making positive contribution over their lifetimes to the profession and society in which they will work, and to provide students with the grounding in the knowledge, skills and profession values essential to professional competency. With its ladderized feature, Accountancy students are given the option to get employed and gain experience while they learn.
Bachelor of Science in Business Administration major in Business Economics (BSBA Business Economics)
The dynamic character of business necessitates the constant and regular upgrading of the Business Economics curriculum to keep pace with the demands of the local and international business environment. The newly revised curriculum is designed to strengthen student’s understanding and appreciation of economic theories and to equip them with the expertise in the use of more mathematical or quantitative tools required in economic analysis and decision-making.
The intensive nature of academic preparation inherent in this curriculum will not only equip the students with adequate knowledge to enable them to face the challenges of the modern business profession, making them globally competitive, but will also provide them the solid foundation required for them to survive the rigors of graduate studies.
Bachelor of Science in Business Administration major in Entrepreneurial Marketing (BSBA Entrepreneurial Marketing)
The BSBA Major in Entrepreneurial Marketing is an innovative undergraduate degree program which integrates the dynamic fields of Marketing and Entrepreneurship Education. This revised curriculum is envisioned to address two (2) alternative career opportunities of its graduates. Specifically, the course aims to increase its graduate chances of getting employment or creating jobs for themselves thru entrepreneurship (or self-employment).
Aside from the social sciences, mathematics and natural sciences subjects, the curriculum also requires students to be exposed to the various functional areas in business management.
A terminal requirement of the course is an actual-hands on business experience that provides graduating students the opportunity to put up their own micro-enterprise, raise capital, engage in production, market their products/services and manage their human financial resources.
Master in Business Management (MBM)
Objective
The Master in Business Management (MBM) program aims to prepare students for positions in middle and higher management in the private and public sector, equip them with experties in the planning and development of new enterprises, and prepare them to handle business instruction, research and extension services.
Specialization
- Finance
- Production Management
- Human Resource Management
- Marketing
- Institutional Management
- Coop Management
MBM Lecturers
- Prof. Julita W. Bokingo
- Prof. Miriam P. Cue, Ph. D.
- Prof. Sheevun Di O. Guliman
- Prof. Milagros R. Narido
- Prof. Anne J. Orejana D. M.
- Prof. Pamela F. Resurreccion
- Prof. Alita T. Roxas, D. M.
- Prof. Marcelo P. Salazar, D.M.
- Prof. Maria Rizalia Y. Teves
Brief History
On October 10, 1973, the MSU Board of Regents approved the offering of the MBA Program on a semestral basis under the Institute of Development Management (IDM) as an extension program of the College of Business Administration, MSU-Marawi. The IDM was initially housed in the MSU-IIT as a separate cost center known as the School of Development Management (SDM) under a dean.
BOR Resolution No. 198, S. 1981 converted the MBA program into MBM program with two options, thesis and non-thesis, offered on a trimestral basis. In April 1985, the said program became the college of Business Administration's Graduate Division, headed by a Program Coordinator and supervised by both the CBA Dean and the Dean of the Graduate School.
After eighteen years under the trimestral schedule, the MBM curriculum was again converted to the semestral schedule on May 31, 1999. This is embodied in BOR Resolution No. 62, S. 1999.
The revised curriculum features a solid foundation in tool and functional management courses enhanced by seminars organized by students in each of the seven courses. As in the trimester curriculum, a student may choose between the thesis and non-thesis option. Instead of the 48 units required to be awarded the MBM degree, a student now needs only 42 units.
