Winter Session classes are a great opportunity to accelerate your graduation, return to school, or explore a new area of interest. This intensive session between the Fall and Spring semesters offers online courses from SDSU’s degree programs. Enrollment to these online winter break classes is open to current SDSU students, students from other colleges and universities, high school graduates, and working professionals.
Courses
Format: Online
Theory and practice of accounting applicable to recording, summarizing, and reporting of business transactions for external reporting and other external uses. Asset valuation; revenue and expense recognition; various asset, liability, and capital accounts.Format: Online
Taxation of individuals, including income, deductions, credits, social security taxes, and property transactions.Prerequisites:Prerequisites: Accountancy 201 and 202. Approved upper division business major, business minor, or other approved major.
Proof of completion of prerequisites required: Copy of transcript.Format: Online
Theoretical concepts and dimensions of ethics in business decisions. Ethics of decision alternatives using different approaches and philosophies, with application of an integrative ethical decision model to cases from various business subdisciplines.Prerequisites:Approved upper division business major or another major approved by the Fowler College of Business.
Proof of completion of prerequisite required: Copy of transcriptFormat: Face to Face
Objectives of financial management. Financing the business enterprise. Internal financial management. Introduction to the cost of capital, valuation, dividend policy, leverage, international finance, and the techniques of present value and its applications. Sources of capital. (Formerly numbered Finance 323.)
Prerequisites: Approved upper division business major, business minor, or another major approved by the Fowler College of Business.
Format: Online
Principles of economic analysis, economic institutions, and issues of public policy. Emphasis on direction of production, allocation of resources, and distribution of income, through the price system (microanalysis); and international economics.Format: Online
Behavior of consumers, firms and industries with respect to product and input markets. Price system and other models of economic decision making. Economic efficiency and welfare; property rights and externalities.Prerequisites:: Economics 102 with approval of department.
Recommended: Mathematics 120 or 124 or 150.
Format: Online
Concepts, definitions, and measures of essential cultural components of tourism. Integrated view of interrelated socio-cultural tourism issues with an understanding and appreciation of diverse cultures.Prerequisites: Completion of the General Education requirement in Foundations of Learning II.B., Social and Behavioral Sciences.