Students meet and receive advice from successful business journalism professionals in newspapers, magazines, broadcast outlets, news services, and trade publications. The three-semester program includes coursework in the College of Communication and approved elective coursework in the School of Management, Economics Department, and Department of Philosophy tailored to a student's goals. A third-semester professional internship is included.
Graduates can cover stories involving any industry or financial trend around the globe. Courses such as "Introduction to Business and Economics Reporting" (JO 501) teach basics of stocks, the economy, finance, and business news coverage, and give the opportunity to have stories published in daily newspapers and financial publications.
In addition, students will select two or three courses from the School of Management or the Department of Economics. These selections should be made in consultation and with the approval of the student's advisor. The selection of courses will be guided by the student's interests, career aspirations and knowledge of business and economics.
COM JO 501
Introduction to Business and Economics Reporting
Comprehensive training in writing business and economics stories.
The emphasis is on understanding basic concepts and developing clear,
simple language to describe complex issues. Students cover Boston-area
companies and meet with business leaders and business and economics
reporters from around the nation and world.
COM JO 721
Journalism Principles and Techniques
Students acquire techniques of news writing and reporting by covering
a full range of news stories in a laboratory situation. Stress on
deadlines, writing, and reporting. Includes weekly seminar on journalism
principles as illustrated by current events and controversies.
COM JO 525
Media Law and Ethics
An examination of the many ethical issues and dilemmas that face
reporters, editors, and producers and how to resolve them with professional
integrity. Danger of actions for contempt or defamation, laws of
copyright and intellectual property.
COM JO 502
Writing Profiles of Business Leaders
Business writers can also be fine stylists. This course covers ways
of identifying good subjects for business profiles, techniques of
interviewing, opportunities to deepen the profile through document
research, methods of situating the profile subject in the context
of his or her company's financial performance and techniques of organization
and narrative story-telling.
COM JO 722
Advanced Journalism Seminar
News writing and reporting in the Boston area. Students cover working
beats.
COM JO 807
Advanced Journalism Research
A rigorous grounding in research and investigative methods from interviews
and records searching to computer-assisted reporting and use of the
Freedom of Information Act.
CAS EC 501
Microeconomic Theory
Covers the basic concepts and techniques of microeconomic theory.
Topics include consumer demand and its foundation on preferences
and budget constraints, economics of uncertainty and imperfect information,
production theory, applied competitive equilibrium analysis, elementary
game theory, and imperfect competition.
CAS EC 502
Macroeconomic Theory
Overview of macroeconomics, leading to successive focus on long-run
economic growth and inflation, and on short-run fluctuations with
emphasis on the role of fiscal and monetary policy. Readings from
research journals; introduction to analysis of macroeconomic data.
CAS EC 545
Financial Economics
Provides a sound understanding of the economic principles of finance,
including the financial decisions and capital structure of a corporation,
and its relation to capital markets. Models of capital asset pricing
and investors' behavior are also discussed.
CAS EC 551
Economics of Labor Markets
Economic behavior of labor markets and labor market institutions
in the United States. Wage determination, labor allocation, discrimination,
economics of trade unions, and industrial relations. Implications
of labor market behaviors for public policy.
CAS EC 571
Energy and Environmental Economics
Environmental resources and markets characterized from physical,
economic, and legal standpoints. Welfare arguments for public sector
intervention. Methodologies for policy assessment and simulation
analyzed, including project analysis, new technology, evaluation
models, deterministic and econometric models.
CAS EC 591
International Economics
Theory of international trade; empirical evidence from both industrialized
and developing economies. The factor content of trade, technology
and trade patterns, scale economies and imperfect competition, elements
of economic geography. Policy interventions: tariffs, the exchange
rate, trading blocs, and political economy of reform.
CAS EC 595
International Finance
Applies economic tools to open-economy macroeconomics. Topics include
the determinants of the current account, exchange rate management,
international capital markets, and growth in the world economy. Topical
issues: the formation of the Euro; debt and financial crisis in developing
countries.
GSM AC 710
Financial and Managerial Accounting
An introduction to accounting, and an examination of how it helps
in decision-making. Financial accounting (information needs of stockholders,
creditors, and analysts) and managerial accounting (information needs
of managers) are stressed equally. Topics covered include income
statement and balance sheet format, purposes, and limitations; statement
of cash flows; analysis of financial statements; cost behavior; budgeting;
and divisional performance measurement. [Lectures, exams, and team
project.]
GSM MK 723
Marketing Management
This course builds an in-depth understanding of basic marketing concepts
and applies those concepts to a variety of management situations,
including non-profit and public sector settings. The course provides
working knowledge of the tools of marketing (product policy, pricing,
distribution, promotion, consumer behavior), and the ways in which
these tools can be usefully employed. The course builds practical
skills in analyzing marketing problems and opportunities, and in
developing marketing programs.
GSM FE 721
Financial Management
Financial Management examines three sets of problems: (1) saving
and investment decisions by households, (2) investment and financing
decisions by corporations, and (3) the role of securities markets
and financial intermediaries in the economy. Decisions today affect
the timing of and uncertainty about future flows of income; both
timing and risk determine the current value of those future flows.
This course develops the tools required to analyze these decisions
and their interaction within the financial system.
CAS PH 650
Types of Ethical Theory
Close reading of several essential works in the history of ethical
theory, including some of the following: Plato, Aristotle, Spinoza,
Kant, and Mill.
CAS PH 651
Contemporary Ethical Theory
An examination of twentieth-century English and American moral theories
including those of Moore, Foot, Williams, MacIntyre, and Rawls.