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UMUC European Division–Term V/99-00 |
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MGMT 503. PLANNING, BUDGETING AND EVALUATION TENTATIVE COURSE OUTLINE |
Class Times: Weekend A: 2/3 and 16/17 June; 7/8 and 21/22 July, 9:00-16:00
Location: Mildenhall-Room TBA
Lecturer: Valerie Mock, Ph.D.
Phone: TBA
e-mail: UMUC_UK@hotmail.com, docmock@hotmail.com
Office Hours: 1/2 hour before and after each class session and other times by appointment
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Pre-requisites: none. |
Course Credit: 3 semester hours
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Bryson, John M.. Strategic Planning for Public and Non-Profit Organizations, revised ed. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers. 1995. Weiss, Carol. Evaluation, 2nd ed. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Prentice Hall,1998. HANDOUTS: A number of handouts will be used to supplement the texts. Foremost among them are:
Additional handouts will be forthcoming during the term. |
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COURSE DESCRIPTION: This course presents a model of strategic planning, examines the relationship of strategic planning to budgeting and to program evaluation in a conceptually integrated system. Considerable attention is paid to the strategic planning process with special emphasis on such critical issues as mission definition, assessment of the impact of forces in the environment, stakeholder analysis, definition of strategic issues, budgeting strategies and processes as well as the role of evaluation. Also addressed are such topics as how organizations make decisions and the role of values in decision making. Additionally, several skills that facilitate strategic planning are introduced and practiced. |
GRADING CRITERIA:
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Group Research/Application Project (written and oral presentation) |
30 points |
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Case Analysis |
10 points |
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Midterm (including comprehensive question) |
25 points |
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Final (including comprehensive question) |
25 points |
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Class Participation |
10 points |
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TOTAL |
100 points |
GRADING SCALE:
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90-100 points = A |
80- 89 points = B |
70 -79 points = C |
Below 70 points = FA |
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ASSIGNMENTS |
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Group Project: Each group will be expected to prepare and present a professional analysis of an organization, making sure to include at least 3/4 of the concepts presented in these texts and class discussion. This analysis will also involve a strategic shift and an implementation plan for that shift. The paper should range from 20-30 single-spaced pages; formatting requirements are described below. The oral presentation should last 20-30 minutes with 10-15 minutes for Q's and A's and be prepared as a government official might argue/present the topic for consideration. The paper should be written as a position paper including all appropriate references, budget, and statistics. In addition, I would like an appendix that details the strategy for presenting the proposal, a discussion of arguments against the proposal that one would expect to hear (including those that might be posed by the media), and proposed answers to these arguments. Students are expected to know their topic well enough to answer questions from the instructor and fellow classmates. Each member of the group will have the opportunity to grade the other members on their level of participation/ effort on the project. Format of the paper: This paper should average 10 pages plus appropriate references (more if many graphs/charts are used). A minimum of 5 references are required and should follow a consistent, standardly accepted style (APA or MLA). The written paper should be in 12 point type, single-spaced, with 1-inch margins. It should include appropriate charts, statistics, and headings and be stapled in the upper left-hand corner. Paper in plastic jackets will be refused. Case Analyses: For each case, you are expected to write/present orally the major points of the case, and make recommendations for improving the situation(s). These analyses should reflect the strategic process discussed during class. The general outline for case analysis follows the class schedule. You are expected to prepare one case for class presentation and discussion in partnership with at least one other student in the class. Midterm/Final: The midterm will consist of short answer essay questions, a comprehensive question, and a take home case. The essay questions will be based on the objectives for this course. The final will be comprehensive and consist of a take home comprehensive question and a case analysis. Class Participation: Each student will be judged on the quality, not quantity, of participation in class discussions. |
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COURSE POLICIES/EXPECTATIONS |
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The following policies apply to this class. These policies are generally reflected in the graduate catalog. |
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COURSE OBJECTIVES |
At the end of the class the students should be able to:
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In addition to the academic objectives, students are expected to improve their skills in the following areas: |
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LECTURER INFORMATION |
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Teaching Philosophy–I believe students learn best when learning is fun and applied to real-world situations and when students are involved in the process. Therefore, students are expected to participate in discussions work in groups to resolve in-class exercises assist their fellow students when possible (without doing their work for them) and to ask questions when there is confusion. I believe that every student starts out with an A in the class and through his/her behavior illustrates to me that they are unworthy of an A. As an instructor it is my job to facilitate the learning process, but I can’t do so unless I have feedback as to what may be impeding that process. Biography–After obtaining a BA from the University of Chicago in Anthropology Dr. Mock worked for IBM for 15 years primarily in the technical writing field as writer, editor, and manager, and second-line manager. Her highest position was as the division’s publications coordinator in the Systems Architecture Department reporting to the General Systems Division Vice President of Manufacturing. She has worked with the IBM 1800MPX System, the 360 and 370 Systems, the System/34, /36, and /38, among others. For several years she was a member of an application development team working in the manufacturing, health, education, and banking industries. After leaving IBM she worked as an consultant to the IBM Corporation, the American Red Cross, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta Management Institute, USAID, Time Systems International, and Zygonic Technologies. As part of her consulting assignments, she has taught management and marketing concepts to students from developing countries who were executives in the local governments and Non-government organizations. In 1981 she received her MBA from Emory University and completed her Ph.D. at Georgia State University in Management in 1992. Since that time she has been consulting and teaching business courses at Piedmont College in northeast Georgia and at Fort Valley State University in central Georgia. She has worked for Maryland in Europe for three years and is currently the Academic Director for Graduate. |
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TENTATIVE SCHEDULE |
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PLEASE NOTE: STUDENTS ARE EXPECTED TO READ THE ASSIGNMENTS PRIOR TO COMING TO CLASS. At a minimum if you cannot find the time to read all of the assignment scan the chapter and read the chapter summaries. Note all chapter references prior to May 2nd are for the Bryson book; after that the chapter references are for the Weiss text. |
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Class |
Topics: |
Activities: |
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Class 1 June 2 morning |
Introduction to course, lecturer, and class members; Why Strategic Planning?; The Strategy Change Cycle |
Presentation of course, lecturer, students; Lecture/ discussion of what strategic planning is; formation of groups/discussion of possible organizations; Assignment: Read Chapters 1 and 2 |
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Class 2 June 2 afternoon |
Initiating and Agreeing on a Strategic Planning Process; Organizational Mandates and Mission; Political Issues |
Lecture(s)/discussion; group exercises; Assignment: Read Chapters 3 and 4 |
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Class 3 June 3 morning |
Continued Discussion of the Mandates/Mission; External Environmental Analysis (including the macro environ-ment and stakeholders); Corporate corollaries |
Review/Questions; Lecture(s)/discussion; group exercises; Assignment: Read Chapter 8 and Resources A and E |
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Class 4 June 3 afternoon |
The Internal Environment; SWOT (strengths, weak-nesses, opportunities, threats) |
Review/Questions; Lecture(s)/discussion; group meetings to finalize project selection; Assignment: Read Chapter 5 |
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Class 5 June 16 morning |
Identifying Strategic Issues; Defining the Strategic Oppor-tunities; Generating Alterna-tives; Selecting among the Alternatives; Decision-making |
Review/Questions; Lecture(s)/discussion; group exercises; Assignment: Read Chapter 6 and Resources B and C |
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Class 6 June 16 afternoon |
Formulating and Adopting Strategies and Plans to Manage the Issues |
Review/Questions; Lecture(s)/discussion; group meetings; Assignment: Read Chapter 7 |
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Class 7 June 17 morning |
Implementing Strategies and Plans; review of Strategy Formulation; Presentation of Case 1 and Case 2 |
Review/Questions; Lecture(s)/discussion; Assignment: Read Chapter 9 and Resource D; Case 1 and 2 Presentations; Presentation of the mission statement, objectives, and external environment for each group |
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Class 8 June 17 afternoon |
Implementation continued: Leadership; McKinsey’s 7’s + Communication; Conflict; Presentation of Case 3 and Case 4 |
Review/Questions; Lecture(s)/discussion; Group exercise; Review for Midterm, Assignment: Read Chapter 11; Case 3 and 4 Presentations |
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Class 9 July 7 morning |
Midterm over Bryson book except for Chapters 10 and 12 |
Midterm including comprehensive question related to materials studied |
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Class 10 July 7 afternoon |
Reassessing and Revising Strategies and Plans; Strategic Management Control (Evaluations and Budgets); Understanding the Program |
Review/Questions; Lecture(s)/discussion; Group meetings; Assignment: Read Chapters 10 and 12; Chapter 3 (Weiss) |
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Class 11 July 8 morning |
Budgeting |
Review/Questions; Lecture(s)/discussion; Do budgeting exercises; group meetings; Assignment: Read Budgeting Handouts |
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Class 12 July 8 afternoon |
Budgeting continued; Evaluation: What it is; Presentation of Case 5 and Case 6 |
Review/Questions; Lecture(s)/discussion; group meetings; Assignment: Read Chapter 1; Case 5 and 6 Presentations |
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Class 13 July 21 morning |
The Purpose of Evaluation; Planning the Evaluation Presentation of Case 7 and Case 8 |
Review/Questions; Lecture(s)/discussion; Assignment: Read Chapters 2 and 4; Case 7 and 8 Presentations |
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Class 14 July 21 afternoon |
Design of the Evaluation; Extensions of Good Design |
Review/Questions; Lecture(s)/discussion; Assignment: Read Chapters 8 and 10 |
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Class 15 July 22 morning |
Evaluating with Integrity; Human Subjects in Research; Summary of class concepts |
Review/Questions; Lecture(s)/discussion; Assignment: Read Chapter 14; Final |
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Class 16 July 22 afternoon |
Presentation of Group Projects |
Project Presentations (20-25 minutes each) |
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