--48 hours
Economic development of the United States
1 term, 3 hours a week--48 hours
Money and banking 1 term, 3 hours a week--48 hours
English--Written, Business English
2 terms, 2 hours a week--64 hours
Oral English--Public Speaking
4 terms, 1 hour a week--64 hours
_Additional electives_--one course of at least 96 hours in Government
and enough other elective subjects in technical commercial work or
Political Science to accrue at least a total of 1000 hours.
The available additional electives in accounting are advanced
courses in different special fields such as Advanced Cost
Accounting, Municipal Accounting--General and Departmental,
Systems for particular industries or forms of business, Public
Utilities Rate Making and Regulation, etc.
In Government the available electives include such subjects as
American Government and Citizenship, American Constitutional Law,
International Law, Political Theory, Comparative Government, State
Legislation and Administration, Municipal Administration, etc.
In Political Science, courses in Economics and Business, such as
Economic Problems, Business Organization and Management, Public
Finance, Foreign Trade, Foreign Exchange, Insurance, Advertising,
Salesmanship, etc., are available, while general and special
courses may be taken in Sociology and Statistics.
Courses of study of this sort in a specialized field are offered in
colleges usually at night for students who are in active business
during the day. With more or less extensive additions in scientific,
literary, and linguistic fields they become the curricula leading to
baccalaureate degrees as represented by Type III, to follow. Large
private institutes or schools conducted for profit and also
correspondence institutions offer similar courses. Other groups of
studies in particular fields are: in banking, in transportation or
traffic, in sales management, including advertising and salesmanship,
and in foreign trade.
A group in Foreign Trade will typify this sort of course of study,
which differs from the one in Accountancy just given because the
make-up will be determined wholly by each institution quite
independent of legally established professional standards.
TYPE II. TO PREPARE STUDENTS FOR WORK IN A SPECIAL FIELD, FOREIG
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