UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS
Business Forensics Major
Program Chair, David Welch, D.B.A., CPA, CFE Curriculum Development Team: Tom Hrubec, Ed.D. David Welch, D.B.A., Lead Faculty Yi Yang, Ph.D., Instructional Designer Younghee Kong, Ph.D., Instructional Designer Advisory Boards (listed on page 200)
Business Forensics is the application of business and basic accounting principles, theories and discipline to facts or hypotheses at issue in a legal dispute and encompasses every branch of business knowledge.
Business Forensics consists of two major components: (1) litigation services that recognize the role of the business graduate as an expert or consultant and (2) investigative services that make use of the business persons’ skills, which may or may not lead to courtroom testimony. Business Forensics may involve the application of special skills in accounting, auditing, business administration, finance, quantitative methods, certain areas of the law and research, and investigative skills to collect, analyze and evaluate evidential matter and to interpret and communicate findings to expose the causes and effects of business fraud, questionable business practices, or identify theft.
The educational objectives of Business Forensics are to enable graduates to: • Attain a fundamental working knowledge in the functional areas of management, marketing, accounting, finance, and economics
• Demonstrate an understanding of the legal and ethical obligations for working within the social environment of business
• Apply the principles of business within a global environment • Demonstrate the ability to use business tools • Demonstrate information literacy • Demonstrate the ability to communicate effectively • Apply knowledge of business concepts and functions in an integrated manner
• Plan, conduct, and document the interview of individuals • Prepare documentation of the findings of a fraud investigation • Document and analyze internal controls.
Courses in Decision Making and Problem Solving, Organizational Policy and Ethics combined with a four-course sequence in fraud examination provide the conceptual framework for the major.
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE (B.S.)
BUSINESS FORENSICS (124 SEMESTER HOURS) FUNDAMENTAL GENERAL EDUCATION CORE (24 HOURS)*
*All courses must be at the 100 or 200 level
Minimum of three semester hours of English Composition (if the course does not have a research paper component, COMM 130 Research Paper, two semester credits, is also required) Choose COMM 120 College Writing.
UNIVERSITY ELECTIVES (18 HOURS)*
Any undergraduate courses offered by the University except developmental education courses.
*A maximum of 8 credit hours of specific MBA courses can be substituted. Contact your Academic Advisor for information concerning the Joint BS/MBA Programs of Study and graduate admission requirements.
Minimum of three semester hours of Mathematics (at least one mathematics or statistics course beyond the level of intermediate algebra) Choose from MATH 160 College Algebra, MATH 180 Applied Calculus, MATH 210 Finite Mathematics, MATH 220 Business Calculus, or MATH 215 Statistical Concepts.
Minimum of six semester hours of Sciences (two science courses, with one having a laboratory component) Choose from the Science discipline.
Minimum of six semester hours of Social and Behavioral Sciences (which must be in at least two different disciplines) Choose from the Anthropology, Economics, Psychology, and Sociology disciplines.
Minimum of six semester hours of Arts and Humanities Choose from the Humanities discipline.
ADDITIONAL GENERAL EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS (26 HOURS)
COMP 106 - Introduction to Spreadsheets (1) COMP 108 - Introduction to Databases (1) ECON 220* - Introduction to Macroeconomics (4) HUMN 210 - Introduction to Logic and Critical Thinking Skills (2) HUMN 305 - Global Issues (4) MATH 215** - Statistical Concepts (4) PF 321- Learning Strategies (2) SPCH 100 - Speech Communication (4) OR COMM 150 - Interpersonal Communication (4) General Education Electives (4)
*Select another Social Science elective if ECON 220 is used in the Fundamental General Education Core. **Select another General Education Elective if MATH 215 is used in the Fundamental General Education Core.
BUSINESS CORE (28 HOURS)
ACCT 215 - Financial Accounting (4) ACCT 225 - Managerial Accounting (4) BSAD 220 - Business Law (4) BSAD 312 - Principles of Management (4) ECON 210 - Introduction to Microeconomics (4) FINA 301 - Principles of Finance (4) MKTG 300 - Marketing (4)
Franklin University Bulletin •
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