Cynlluniau Astudio

Business and Management


1 : Awarding Institution / Body
Aberystwyth University


2a : Teaching Institution / University
Aberystwyth University


2b : Work-based learning (where appropriate)


Information provided by Aberystwyth Business School
-

N/A



3a : Programme accredited by
Aberystwyth University


3b : Programme approved by
Aberystwyth University


4 : Final Award
Bachelor of Science


5 : Programme title
Business and Management


6 : UCAS code
N122


7 : QAA Subject Benchmark


Information provided by Aberystwyth Business School
-

Business and Management



8 : Date of publication


Information provided by Aberystwyth Business School
-

October 2023



9 : Educational aims of the programme


Information provided by Aberystwyth Business School
-

The purposes of Business and Management degree courses are to:

  • develop a critical understanding of organisations, cultures and structures, their management and wider economic, environmental and social contexts

  • instil an understanding of responsible leadership

  • provide preparation for and development of a wide range of careers, including in business and management

  • develop relevant skills and attributes which enhance employability and equip graduates to become impactful global and inclusive citizens as well as reflective independent and collegial lifelong learners.

  • develop generative learning skills that will motivate and enable graduates to engage in lifelong learning and professional development.

  • enhance employability and enable the development of a successful career in business / management, whether commercial, charitable or public sector.



10 : Intended learning outcomes


Information provided by Aberystwyth Business School
-

The learning outcomes of this programme are designed to meet the expectations of the benchmarking statement for Business and Management. The programme provides opportunities for students to develop and demonstrate knowledge and understanding, skills, qualities and other attributes in the following areas.



10.1 : Knowledge and understanding


Information provided by Aberystwyth Business School
-

Knowledge and understanding should be gained within an overall subject framework made up of the three strands of organisations, the external environment in which they operate and their management, emphasising the interconnectedness of these elements. Students will be able to demonstrate knowledge and understanding in the following areas:

  • A1. Markets and economies: the development, access and operations of markets for resources, good and services

  • A2. Customers - marketing, sales, negotiation and customers: management of customer relationships, consumer behaviour, different approaches for segmentation, targeting, positioning, generating sales and the need for innovation in product and service design.

  • A3. Finance - finance and accounting: the sources, practises and management of finance and the use of accounting and other information systems for planning, control, decision-making and managing the development of appropriate policies and strategies within a changing environment to meet stakeholder interests, and the use of risk and crisis management techniques, business continuity planning and communication techniques and tools to help maximise achievement of strategic objectives financial risk

  • A4. People - people and organisational behaviour: responsible, inclusive and ethical leadership management and development of people and organisations, including employee engagement and the implications of the legal context.

  • A5. Operations - operations and business innovation: the management of resources, the supply chain, procurement, logistics, outsourcing, quality systems, development of service excellence and project management

  • A6. Data analytics, statistics, digital business, information systems and business intelligence: the development of strategic priorities to deliver business at speed through the management, application and implementation of information systems and their impact upon organisations, and to enable data-driven and informed decision-making

  • A7. Business policy and strategy - the development of appropriate policies and strategies within a changing environment to meet stakeholder interests, and the use of risk and crisis management techniques, business continuity planning and communication techniques and tools to help maximise achievement of strategic objectives

  • A8. Pervasive issues – ethics, behaving ethically sustainability, globalisation, corporate social responsibility, diversity, business innovation, creativity, enterprise development, knowledge management and risk management

  • A9. entrepreneurship and enterprise development: taking innovative business ideas to create or co-create new products, services or organisations that will generate a return on financial and/or social investment

Teaching, learning and assessment methods used to enable outcomes to be achieved and demonstrated

Formal teaching in lectures. Use of seminars and tutorials to reinforce subject teaching, often by means of problem based scenarios and case studies. Guided learning is provided by individual module outlines and supplementary reading lists specifying sources of relevant information, available in hard copy and on blackboard. Group work and presentations may be used in some modules. Feedback on assignments.

Assessment

  • coursework reports, reviews and essays

  • examinations (closed and open book)

  • presentations

  • dissertations and projects (n/a for top-up scheme)

  • posters

  • discussion boards

  • creation of new media content (such as infographics, videos, dashboards)

  • learning journals, reflections and portfolios

  • simulations

  • practical activities



10.2 : Skills and other attributes


Information provided by Aberystwyth Business School
-

10.2.1 Intellectual skills

Students should be able to demonstrate a range of cognitive and intellectual skills together with techniques specific to business and management, as follows (no particular order of importance):

  • B1. Cognitive skills of critical thinking, analysis and synthesis. This includes the capability to identify assumptions, evaluate statements in terms of evidence, to detect false logic or reasoning, to identify implicit values, to define terms adequately and to generalise appropriately

  • B2. Problem-solving and critical analysis: analysing facts and circumstances to determine the cause of a problem, decision-making and selecting appropriate, sustainable solutions

  • B3. Research: the ability to analyse and evaluate a range of data, sources of information and appropriate methodologies, which includes the need for strong digital literacy, and to use that research for evidence-based, responsible and ethical decisionmaking.

  • B4. Identifying, formulating and solving business problems, demonstrating the ability to create, evaluate and assess a range of options together with the capacity to apply ideas and knowledge to a range of situations

  • B5. Commercial acumen: based on an awareness of the key drivers for business success, causes of failure and the importance of providing customer satisfaction and building customer loyalty in sustainable ways

  • B6. Innovation, creativity and enterprise: the ability to act entrepreneurially to generate, develop and communicate ideas, manage and exploit intellectual property, gain support and deliver successful and sustainable outcomes

  • B7. Numeracy: the use of quantitative skills to manipulate data, evaluate, estimate and model business problems, functions and phenomena

  • B8. Networking: an awareness of the interpersonal skills of effective listening, negotiating, persuasion and presentation and their use in cultivating business contacts

  • B9. Leadership: boundary-spanning, influencing, relational and collaborative working, including ability to work in partnerships across organisation and sectors

Teaching, learning and assessment methods used to enable outcomes to be achieved and demonstrated

Formal teaching in lectures. Use of seminars and tutorials to reinforce subject teaching, often by means of problem-based scenarios and case studies. Guided learning is provided by individual module outlines and supplementary reading lists specifying sources of relevant information, available in hard copy and on blackboard. Group work and presentations may be used in some modules. Feedback on assignments.

Assessment

  • coursework reports, reviews and essays

  • examinations (closed and open book)

  • presentations

  • dissertations and projects (n/a for top-up scheme)

  • posters

  • discussion boards

  • creation of new media content (such as infographics, videos, dashboards)

  • learning journals, reflections and portfolios

  • simulations

  • practical activities

10.2.2 Professional practical skills (where appropriate)

Students should be able to:

  • C1. develop a critical understanding of organisations, cultures and structures, their management and wider economic, environmental and social contexts

  • C2. instil an understanding of responsible leadership

  • C3. develop the capacity to identify, formulate and solve business problems, using appropriate conceptual models, empirical evidence and quantitative and qualitative skills. Plus, conceptual, systemic and critical thinking, analysis, synthesis and evaluation.

  • C4. enhance communication skills using a range of media, including the effective use of communication and information technology.

  • C5. facilitate effective self-management in terms of time, planning and behaviour, motivation, self-starting, individual initiative and enterprise

  • C6. develop capability to perform effectively within a team environment, including leadership, team building, influencing and project management skills. Plus, the ability to work collaboratively and inclusively with both internal and external stakeholders

  • C7. develop interpersonal skills of effective listening, negotiating, persuasion and presentation

  • C8. develop skills of self-reflection: self-analysis and an awareness/sensitivity to diversity in terms of people and cultures - this includes a continuing appetite for development.

  • C9. enhance employability and enable the development of a successful career in business / management, whether commercial, charitable or public sector.

Teaching, learning and assessment methods used to enable outcomes to be achieved and demonstrated

Formal teaching in lectures. Use of seminars and tutorials to reinforce subject teaching, often by means of problem-based scenarios and case studies. Guided learning is provided by individual module outlines and supplementary reading lists specifying sources of relevant information, available in hard copy and on blackboard. Group work and presentations may be used in some modules. Feedback on assignments.

Assessment

  • coursework reports, reviews and essays

  • examinations (closed and open book)

  • presentations

  • dissertations and projects (n/a for top-up scheme)

  • posters

  • discussion boards

  • creation of new media content (such as infographics, videos, dashboards)

  • learning journals, reflections and portfolios

  • simulations

  • practical activities




10.3 : Transferable/Key skills


Information provided by Aberystwyth Business School
-
  • D1 ability to work collaboratively and inclusively with both internal and external stakeholders

  • D2 verbal, non-verbal and digital communication

  • D3 empathy and inclusivity

  • D4 digital literacy and etiquette

  • D5 conceptual, systemic and critical thinking, analysis, synthesis and evaluation

  • D6 self-management: development as independent learners, a readiness to accept responsibility and flexibility, to tolerate uncertainty, handle complexity, challenge assumptions, use evidence to inform critical thinking, be resilient, self-starting and appropriately assertive

  • D7 self-reflection: self-analysis and an awareness/sensitivity to diversity in terms of people and cultures - this includes a continuing appetite for development.

Teaching, learning and assessment methods used to enable outcomes to be achieved and demonstrated

Formal teaching in lectures. Use of seminars and tutorials to reinforce subject teaching, often by means of problem based scenarios and case studies. Guided learning is provided by individual module outlines and supplementary reading lists specifying sources of relevant information, available in hard copy and on blackboard. Group work and presentations may be used in some modules. Feedback on assignments.

Assessment

  • coursework reports, reviews and essays

  • examinations (closed and open book)

  • presentations

  • dissertations and projects (n/a for top-up scheme)

  • posters

  • discussion boards

  • creation of new media content (such as infographics, videos, dashboards)

  • learning journals, reflections and portfolios

  • simulations

  • practical activitie



11 : Program Structures and requirements, levels, modules, credits and awards




BSC Business and Management [N122]

Blwyddyn Academaidd: 2023/2024Cynllun Anrhydedd Sengl - ar gael ers 2014/2015

Hyd (astudio Llawn Amser): 3 blwyddyn

Rheolau Rhan 1

Blwyddyn 1 Craidd (80 Credyd)

Compulsory module(s).

Semester 1
AB11120

Fundamentals of Accounting and Finance

AB13120

Understanding the Economy

AB15120

Fundamentals of Management and Business

Semester 2
AB15220

Data Analytics

Blwyddyn 1 Craidd (20 Credyd)

Compulsory module(s).

Semester 2
AB17120

Marketing Principles and Contemporary Practice

Blwyddyn 1 Opsiynau

(20 credits) Any approved ABS / IEC option.

Rheolau Rhan 2

Blwyddyn 2 Craidd (60 Credyd)

Compulsory module(s).

Semester 1
AB21300

Corporate Governance, Risk and Ethics

AB25420

Human Resource Management

AB27120

Marketing Management

Semester 2
AB21320

Corporate Governance, Risk and Ethics

Blwyddyn 2 Opsiynau

Any approved ABS / IEC option. If you want to write a dissertation in your final year, module AB25320 Reasearch Methods must be chosen.

Blwyddyn 2 Opsiynau

Students must take either CB/AB25120 and CB/AB25220 or CB/AB25540

Semester 2
AB25120

Operations and Supply Chain Management

AB25220

Entrepreneurship and New Venture Creation

AB25540

Strategic Business and Operational Resilience Analysis

CB25120

Gweithrediadau a Rheoli'r Gadwyn Cyflenwi

CB25220

Entreprenwriaeth a Chreu Menter Newydd

CB25540

Dadansoddi Busnes Strategol a Gwydnwch Gweithrediadau

Blwyddyn Olaf Craidd (60 Credyd)

Compulsory module(s).

Semester 1
AB35120

Strategic Leadership

Semester 2
AB31720

Financial Strategy

AB35420

Organizational Psychology

Blwyddyn Olaf Opsiynau

(60 credits) Any approved ABS / IEC modules


12 : Support for students and their learning
Every student is allocated a Personal Tutor. Personal Tutors have an important role within the overall framework for supporting students and their personal development at the University. The role is crucial in helping students to identify where they might find support, how and where to seek advice and how to approach support to maximise their student experience. Further support for students and their learning is provided by Information Services and Student Support and Careers Services.


13 : Entry Requirements
Details of entry requirements for the scheme can be found at http://courses.aber.ac.uk


14 : Methods for evaluating and improving the quality and standards of teaching and learning
All taught study schemes are subject to annual monitoring and periodic review, which provide the University with assurance that schemes are meeting their aims, and also identify areas of good practice and disseminate this information in order to enhance the provision.


15 : Regulation of Assessment
Academic Regulations are published as Appendix 2 of the Academic Quality Handbook: https://www.aber.ac.uk/en/aqro/handbook/app-2/.


15.1 : External Examiners
External Examiners fulfill an essential part of the University’s Quality Assurance. Annual reports by External Examiners are considered by Faculties and Academic Board at university level.


16 : Indicators of quality and standards
The Department Quality Audit questionnaire serves as a checklist about the current requirements of the University’s Academic Quality Handbook. The periodic Department Reviews provide an opportunity to evaluate the effectiveness of quality assurance processes and for the University to assure itself that management of quality and standards which are the responsibility of the University as a whole are being delivered successfully.