Spring 2013 FINA Business Finance Course Syllabus The right to make revisions to this Syllabus is reserved by the professor.

Similar documents
FINN FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Spring 2014

COURSE WEBSITE:

ACCT 100 Introduction to Accounting Course Syllabus Course # on T Th 12:30 1:45 Spring, 2016: Debra L. Schmidt-Johnson, CPA

FINANCE 3320 Financial Management Syllabus May-Term 2016 *

MAT 122 Intermediate Algebra Syllabus Summer 2016

Business Administration

Syllabus Foundations of Finance Summer 2014 FINC-UB

Instructor: Matthew Wickes Kilgore Office: ES 310

Scottsdale Community College Spring 2016 CIS190 Intro to LANs CIS105 or permission of Instructor

International Environmental Policy Spring :374:315:01 Tuesdays, 10:55 am to 1:55 pm, Blake 131

KOMAR UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY (KUST)

Office Hours: Day Time Location TR 12:00pm - 2:00pm Main Campus Carl DeSantis Building 5136

ECON492 Senior Capstone Seminar: Cost-Benefit and Local Economic Policy Analysis Fall 2017 Instructor: Dr. Anita Alves Pena

Name: Giovanni Liberatore NYUHome Address: Office Hours: by appointment Villa Ulivi Office Extension: 312

PreAP Geometry. Ms. Patricia Winkler

MATH 1A: Calculus I Sec 01 Winter 2017 Room E31 MTWThF 8:30-9:20AM

Accounting 312: Fundamentals of Managerial Accounting Syllabus Spring Brown

Class Numbers: & Personal Financial Management. Sections: RVCC & RVDC. Summer 2008 FIN Fully Online

MTH 141 Calculus 1 Syllabus Spring 2017

ACC : Accounting Transaction Processing Systems COURSE SYLLABUS Spring 2011, MW 3:30-4:45 p.m. Bryan 202

Indiana University Northwest Chemistry C110 Chemistry of Life

Intensive English Program Southwest College

Computer Architecture CSC

Course Syllabus Advanced-Intermediate Grammar ESOL 0352

BIOS 104 Biology for Non-Science Majors Spring 2016 CRN Course Syllabus

BUSI 2504 Business Finance I Spring 2014, Section A

GEOG 473/573: Intermediate Geographic Information Systems Department of Geography Minnesota State University, Mankato

Class Mondays & Wednesdays 11:00 am - 12:15 pm Rowe 161. Office Mondays 9:30 am - 10:30 am, Friday 352-B (3 rd floor) or by appointment

CRITICAL THINKING AND WRITING: ENG 200H-D01 - Spring 2017 TR 10:45-12:15 p.m., HH 205

content First Introductory book to cover CAPM First to differentiate expected and required returns First to discuss the intrinsic value of stocks

CALCULUS III MATH

MARKETING ADMINISTRATION MARK 6A61 Spring 2016

MGT 136 Advanced Accounting

Beginning and Intermediate Algebra, by Elayn Martin-Gay, Second Custom Edition for Los Angeles Mission College. ISBN 13:

Psychology 102- Understanding Human Behavior Fall 2011 MWF am 105 Chambliss

Spring 2014 SYLLABUS Michigan State University STT 430: Probability and Statistics for Engineering

Course Syllabus It is the responsibility of each student to carefully review the course syllabus. The content is subject to revision with notice.

CLASS EXPECTATIONS Respect yourself, the teacher & others 2. Put forth your best effort at all times Be prepared for class each day

San José State University Department of Psychology PSYC , Human Learning, Spring 2017

COURSE SYLLABUS AND POLICIES

Accounting 543 Taxation of Corporations Fall 2014

Required Texts: Intermediate Accounting by Spiceland, Sepe and Nelson, 8E Course notes are available on UNM Learn.

APPLIED RURAL SOCIOLOGY SOC 474 COURSE SYLLABUS SPRING 2006

FINANCIAL STRATEGIES. Employee Hand Book

Northern Kentucky University Department of Accounting, Finance and Business Law Financial Statement Analysis ACC 308

Syllabus - ESET 369 Embedded Systems Software, Fall 2016

Department of Accounting ACC Fundamentals of Financial Accounting Fall, 2015 Syllabus

Medical Terminology - Mdca 1313 Course Syllabus: Summer 2017

Fall 2016 ARA 4400/ 7152

Foothill College Fall 2014 Math My Way Math 230/235 MTWThF 10:00-11:50 (click on Math My Way tab) Math My Way Instructors:

Astronomy/Physics 1404 Introductory Astronomy II Course Syllabus

KIN 366: Exercise Psychology SYLLABUS for Spring Semester 2012 Department of Kinesiology, Iowa State University

ANTH 101: INTRODUCTION TO PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY

Course Goal This is the final course in the developmental mathematics sequence and its purpose is to prepare students for College Algebra.

FIN 571 International Business Finance

Biology 1 General Biology, Lecture Sections: 47231, and Fall 2017

IPHY 3410 Section 1 - Introduction to Human Anatomy Lecture Syllabus (Spring, 2017)


Fundamental Accounting Principles, 21st Edition Author(s): Wild, John; Shaw, Ken; Chiappetta, Barbara ISBN-13:

SPM 5309: SPORT MARKETING Fall 2017 (SEC. 8695; 3 credits)

MTH 215: Introduction to Linear Algebra

MGMT3274 INTERNATONAL BUSINESS PROCESSES AND PROBLEMS

Class Tuesdays & Thursdays 12:30-1:45 pm Friday 107. Office Tuesdays 9:30 am - 10:30 am, Friday 352-B (3 rd floor) or by appointment

THE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY Department of Economics. ECON 1012: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS Prof. Irene R. Foster

Human Development: Life Span Spring 2017 Syllabus Psych 220 (Section 002) M/W 4:00-6:30PM, 120 MARB

Course Syllabus for Math

Counseling 150. EOPS Student Readiness and Success

PHO 1110 Basic Photography for Photographers. Instructor Information: Materials:

Physics XL 6B Reg# # Units: 5. Office Hour: Tuesday 5 pm to 7:30 pm; Wednesday 5 pm to 6:15 pm

ASTRONOMY 2801A: Stars, Galaxies & Cosmology : Fall term

ECO 2013: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS Spring 2017

Nutrition 10 Contemporary Nutrition WINTER 2016

Syllabus ENGR 190 Introductory Calculus (QR)

PSY 1012 General Psychology. Course Policies and Syllabus

Course Name: Elementary Calculus Course Number: Math 2103 Semester: Fall Phone:

MAR Environmental Problems & Solutions. Stony Brook University School of Marine & Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS)

MinE 382 Mine Power Systems Fall Semester, 2014

Business Finance 3400 Introduction to Real Estate Autumn Semester, 2017

English Policy Statement and Syllabus Fall 2017 MW 10:00 12:00 TT 12:15 1:00 F 9:00 11:00

Introduction to Yearbook / Newspaper Course Syllabus

Health Sciences and Human Services High School FRENCH 1,

EEAS 101 BASIC WIRING AND CIRCUIT DESIGN. Electrical Principles and Practices Text 3 nd Edition, Glen Mazur & Peter Zurlis

General Microbiology (BIOL ) Course Syllabus

Our Hazardous Environment

International Business Principles (MKT 3400)

Office Location: LOCATION: BS 217 COURSE REFERENCE NUMBER: 93000

Demography and Population Geography with GISc GEH 320/GEP 620 (H81) / PHE 718 / EES80500 Syllabus

Introduction to Forensic Anthropology ASM 275, Section 1737, Glendale Community College, Fall 2008

CHEMISTRY 104 FALL Lecture 1: TR 9:30-10:45 a.m. in Chem 1351 Lecture 2: TR 1:00-2:15 p.m. in Chem 1361

HIST 3300 HISTORIOGRAPHY & METHODS Kristine Wirts

Required Materials: The Elements of Design, Third Edition; Poppy Evans & Mark A. Thomas; ISBN GB+ flash/jump drive

BA 130 Introduction to International Business

BUFFET THEORY AND PRODUCTION - CHEF 2332 Thursday 1:30pm 7:00pm Northeast Texas Community College - Our Place Restaurant Course Syllabus Fall 2013

SYLLABUS. EC 322 Intermediate Macroeconomics Fall 2012

MGMT 3362 Human Resource Management Course Syllabus Spring 2016 (Interactive Video) Business Administration 222D (Edinburg Campus)

Class Meeting Time and Place: Section 3: MTWF10:00-10:50 TILT 221

CHEM:1070 Sections A, B, and C General Chemistry I (Fall 2017)

ACADEMIC POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

3D DIGITAL ANIMATION TECHNIQUES (3DAT)

Language Arts Methods

Transcription:

Spring 2013 FINA 3300-02 Business Finance Course Syllabus The right to make revisions to this Syllabus is reserved by the professor. LOCATOR INFORMATION: Course Name: FINA 3300-02 Business Finance Credit Hours: 3 Credit Hours Meeting/Contact Hours: Tuesday and Thursday, 2:40pm 4:05pm, AWC 210 INSTRUCTOR: Name: Dr. Chun-Da Chen, Ph.D. in Finance Office: AWC K452 Phone: 615-963-7384 E-mail: cchen2@mytsu.tnstate.edu (I ONLY use this email) Office Hours: Tuesday: 10:00am-5:30pm Thursday: 10:00am-2:40pm REQUIRED TEXTBOOK & MATERIALS: 1. REQUIRED CLASS MATERIAL: APLIA (Access Code, including the following digital-textbook and on-line Assignments) digital-textbook (PDF format) Fundamentals of Financial Management: Concise Seventh Edition, by Eugene F. Brigham and Joel F. Houston. On-line Assignments (will be automatically graded by the system AFTER DUE) Register at APLIA (http://aplia.com/) for this course Course Key: DK2E-X97Y-QXHZ 2. REQUIRED CALCULATOR (TI BA II) You are responsible for having a financial calculator the first day of the semester. A financial calculator is REQUIRED as it will probably be impossible to pass the tests without one. As you will soon see, the ability to use a financial calculator is critical to success in the class. Calculators may not be shared during tests. Please make sure that you bring your calculator and extra batteries to each class and test. ONLY the Texas Instruments BA II calculator will be used from CHAPTER 5. All steps to work various problems with it will be explained. If you have an engineering or other technical background and have knowledge of a financial calculator other than TI BA II, you are responsible for learning how to operate your calculator within the first week of the semester and your calculator 1

should be capable of solving for 1) Present value, 2) Future value, 3) Annuity payments, 4) Interest rate, 5) the number of time periods, 6) Net present value, and 7) the internal rate of return. However, using same calculator you can follow lectures most easily. I will UPLOAD related materials (PPTs) and handouts in your MYTSU account, and then you can download them by yourself if you missed the class. COURSE DESCRIPTION: Financial goals, ratios, sources and uses of funds, asset management, capital budgeting, leverage, cost of capital, dividend policy, valuation, mergers and reorganizations, financial performance evaluation. Prerequisite: AC 212. COURSE OBJECTIVES and LEARNING ENVIORNMENT: This is the first course in Finance designed for the general business students, not just for Econ and finance major. The main objectives of the course are: 1. To introduce you, student, to the world of finance. 2. To introduce you, student, to basic financial concepts such as the time value of money, asset valuation, capital budgeting, and risk and return. By the end of the course you have a basic grasp of finance principles that take you beyond just memorizing formulas. Doing so will enable you to better understand current events in finance and will provide a solid framework for any courses you may take in finance. Hopefully, by the end of this semester you will want to take additional courses in Finance and decide to major in Economics and Finance. ACADEMIC INTEGRITY: Academic honesty and integrity lie at the heart of any educational enterprise. Students are expected to do their own work and neither to give nor to receive assistance during quizzes and examinations. Deliberate violations of academic integrity (plagiarism, cheating, misrepresentation, and fabrication of information) are not tolerated. Actions outlined in the Tennessee State University Student Handbook under Code of Student Conduct will be followed for incidents of academic misconduct. REASONABLE ACCOMODATIONS: Any students requiring accommodations should contact Patricia Scudder, Director of Students with Disabilities Disabled Student Services Office, at 963-7400, preferably before the fourth class meeting. The College of Business, in conjunction with the Office of Disabled Student Services, makes reasonable accommodations for qualified students with medically documented disabilities. I need to be aware of your status if it will affect your class activities and assignments---before assignments are due. CODE OF STUDENT CONDUCT: There will be no eating, drinking, sleeping or disruptive behavior in the classroom. Each student is encouraged to participate in classroom activities, ask questions, and work along with the class as recommendations/problem solutions to illustrations, examples, 2

and cases are examined. Additionally, cell phones must be turned off upon entering the classroom and should remain so until class has ended. Action will be taken against those students who do not adhere to appropriate classroom behavior. ATTENDANCE & LATE WORK: Be on time; students who arrive late disrupt the discussion and diminish the learning process. If a student is not present, she or he cannot learn from unique thoughts and in sights of group discussion. Attendance roll will be taken during each class meeting. With the understanding that excessive absences is defined as three missed classes, or the equivalent; a student may be reported for excessive absence from class. Attendance, student participation, and enthusiasm are essential ingredients for success in this course. The classroom is an environment that must be conducive to active learning. You must to attend class regularly, read the assigned chapters before class and work relevant problems outside class. Failing to do so make it likely you will not master the material in this class required for future classes. You are responsible for obtaining any information that is given in class in the event you must miss a class. TEACHING STRATEGIES: This class meets TWICE a week for a total of 3 hours. I will be talking a lot about the finance, but I intend to mix this with numerous examples on how to actually carry out the calculations involved. ASSIGNMENTS & EVALUATION CRITERIA: First Three Tests (TESTs 1, 2, and 3) The first three tests will be NON-COMPREHENSIVE, that is, questions on each test will be taken from chapters covered since the LAST TEST. Each test will have 20 multiple choice questions (conceptual and numerical problems). Final Test (TEST 4) Final test will be COMPREHENSIVE and has 25 multiple choice questions (conceptual and numerical problems). However, you can take a note paper (LETTER SIZE, ONE PAGE, Front to Back) during the tests and bring pens, pencils, erasers, and a calculator. Test content will be based on PROBLEMS, HOMEWORK, EXERCISE, and EXAMPLES in the textbook and class handouts. Course Grade Your overall course grade will depend on a combination of the following: 12 set Homeworks (CH 1-12)* 480 Points 20% Test 1 (CH 1-4) 100 Points 20% Test 2 (CH 5-7) 100 Points 20% Test 3 (CH 8-10) 100 Points 20% Test 4 (Comprehensive) 100 Points 20% Total Points 176 Points Extra Credit Assignments (Acct. I&II, Math. I&II, and Stat. I&II): 402 Points 5%** 3

* Professor will announce and assign 12 set homeworks after finishing each text chapter via APLIA during this semester. Late homework delivery is NOT acceptable. ** Extra Credits (402*5% 20 points, this credits will be added into your Total Points) GRADING SCALE: Your total possible score (20 points + 176 points)/176 points = your percentage score 90 % and above A 80 % to 89.9 % B 70 % to 79.9 % C 60 % to 69.9 % D *** Do not anticipate any further grade adjustments. Calculation of Your Final Grade: (Acct I Acct II Math I Math II Stat I Stata II) (Ch1 Ch2... Ch12) 5% (Ch1 20% ( T1 Ch2 T2... T3 Ch12) 20% T4) 20% ( T1 T2 T3 T4) 20% COURSE OUTLINE AND TEST SCHEDULE: Week 1: Jan. 17 Course Introduction and GO Aplia Registration Week 2: Jan. 22 Chapter 1: An Overview of Financial Management Jan. 24 Chapter 2: Financial Markets and Institutions Week 3: Jan. 29 Chapter 2: Financial Markets and Institutions Jan. 31 Chapter 3: Financial Statements, Cash Flow, and Taxes Week 4: Feb. 5 Chapter 3: Financial Statements, Cash Flow, and Taxes Feb. 7 Chapter 4: Analysis of Financial Statements Week 5: Feb. 12 Chapter 4: Analysis of Financial Statements Feb. 14 TEST 1 (CH 1-4)/1.5 Hours Week6: Feb. 19 Chapter 5: Time Value of Money Feb. 21 Chapter 5: Time Value of Money Week 7: Feb. 26 Chapter 5: Time Value of Money Feb. 28 Chapter 6: Interest Rates Week 8: Mar. 5 Chapter 6: Interest Rates Mar. 7 Chapter 7: Bonds and Their Valuation Week 9: Mar. 12 NO Class, Fall Break Mar. 14 NO Class, Fall Break Week 10 Mar. 19 Chapter 7: Bonds and Their Valuation 4

Mar. 21 TEST 2 (CH 5-7)/1.5 Hours Week 11: Mar. 26 Chapter 8: Risk and Rates of Return Mar. 28 Chapter 8: Risk and Rates of Return Week 12: Apr. 2 Chapter 9: Stocks and Their Valuation Apr. 4 Chapter 9: Stocks and Their Valuation Week 13: Apr. 9 Chapter 10: The Cost of Capital Apr. 11 NO Class, Professor s Conference, EFA Online Aplia Extra Credit Assignments DUE Week 14: Apr. 16 Chapter 10: The Cost of Capital Apr. 18 TEST 3 (CH 8-10) /1.5 Hours Week 15: Apr. 23 Chapter 11: The Basics of Capital Budgeting Apr. 25 Chapter 11: The Basics of Capital Budgeting Week 16 Apr. 30 Chapter 12: Cash Flow Estimation and Risk Analysis May 2 Chapter 12: Cash Flow Estimation and Risk Analysis Week 17: May?? TEST 4 (Comprehensive Test) /1.5 Hours GOOD LUCK! -----------------------------------PLEASE DETACH AND TURN IN LOWER PORTAION TO DR. CHEN----------------------------------- SEMESTER/YEAR: / COURSE NAME: INSTRUCTOR S NANE: STUDENT S NAME: I have received, read and understand this syllabus as presented by the instructor and am clear as to the requirements and effort that will be required to succeed in this course. Signature Date GOOD LUCK! 5