DERIVATIVE SECURITIES AND RISK MANAGEMENT TECHNIQUES Course Outline Semester 1‚ 2013 Part A: Course-Specific Information Part B: Key Policies‚ Student Responsibilities and Support [Course Code – Course Name] Table of Contents 1 PART A: COURSE-SPECIFIC INFORMATION 1 2 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 3 STAFF CONTACT DETAILS COURSE DETAILS Teaching Times and Locations Units of Credit Summary of Course Course Aims and Relationship to Other Courses Student Learning Outcomes LEARNING AND TEACHING ACTIVITIES
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|[pic] |Course Syllabus | | |College of Humanities | | |PHL/458 Version 2 | |
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FINS3625 Applied Corporate Finance Course Outline Semester 1‚ 2013 Part A: Course-Specific Information Part B: Key Policies‚ Student Responsibilities and Support FINS3625 – Applied Corporate Finance Table of Contents PART A: COURSE-SPECIFIC INFORMATION 1 STAFF CONTACT DETAILS 1.1 Communication with Staff 2 COURSE DETAILS 2.1 Teaching Times and Locations 2.2 Units of Credit 2.3 Summary of Course 2.4 Course Aims and Relationship to Other Courses 2.5 Student Learning Outcomes
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graduating students‚ we experienced the same stress and pressure of choosing amongst the multitude of course to take in college. In view of this things‚ we decided to conduct a research regarding what courses will further their chance of getting a good career upon their graduation. We will make a parallel research having the pulp of the presently graduating 4th year students regarding their course preference‚ and a systematic research of the trending jobs in demand for the next four or five years
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Times: M/W 12:50-2:05 Course Version: Fall 2014 Course Provider: History 1001 FMWA Baruch Instructor: Prof. Anna Lucille Boozer Office: Room 284 in Black and Latino Studies (4th Floor) Email: Anna.Boozer@baruch.cuny.edu Office Tel: 646-312-4326 Office hours: Wed 11:30-12:30 Office Hours should be used for drop-in meetings that will take 10 minutes or less. Please email me for a longer appointment or if you cannot make the scheduled office hours. Aims This course will provide students
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Office Hours Class Location Class Hours Gerard N. Brathwaite-Sturgeon DMS 5144 (613) 562-5800 (ext 8839: please no voice mail) brathwaite@telfer.uottawa.ca DMS 5144: Thursdays 5:30 – 6:45 or by appointment. DMS 4140 Thursdays: 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm Course Deliverable Team Class Topic Facilitation Individual Article Review Mid-Term Exam Team Case Report and Presentation Final Exam Due Date According to the schedule established in class June 10‚ 2010 June 24‚ 2010 - Mid Term Exam Week Presentations
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ISOM 4750 Business Project Management Fall 2013 Department of Information Systems‚ Business Statistics‚ and Operations Management COURSE: ISOM 4750 Business Project Management (3-0-0:3) This course covers basic principles and practices of project management. Special emphases are on project planning‚ scheduling‚ and control while addressing both the technical and the social aspects of managing business projects. Fall 2013 Time: 9:00–10:20 p.m.‚ Monday and Wednesday Venue: LSKG005
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marks@ualberta.ca Office Hours: MWF 12:30-13:30‚ and by appointment ------------------------------------------------- Lecture Room & Time: TL B2‚ MWF 11:00-11:50 ------------------------------------------------- Course Web Page: E-Class (Moodle) - login with your CCID and password Course Description: Systems of linear equations. Vectors in -space‚ vector equations of lines and planes. Matrix algebra‚ inverses and invertibility. Introduction to linear transformations. Subspaces of -space. Determinants
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Title The Relationship of Brand Equity and Brand Extension: Low Involvement products vs. High Involvement Products Background and Significance In the present‚ technology enhances modern goods production resulting producers can provide resemble products in physical aspects such as quality or packaging. These create no differentiate of products. Consequently‚ Product Brand as well as the customer’s perception is the significance that promotes product differentiates or product
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Instructor: Jean Pommainville Office: TBD E-mail: pommj@jmsb.concordia.ca Office Hours: Mondays and Wednesdays 5:00-5:30 P.M. (check First Class postings for any changes) Office telephone: TBD COURSE DESCRIPTION: Through the study of laws‚ ethical principles and court judgments‚ this course will introduce students to important legal and ethical issues that they may encounter within a business organization. In today’s environment of social awareness‚ business can no longer focus solely on
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