Finance BBA Curriculum

Anderson Classroom The Department offers a 15-hour concentration in accounting at the BBA level. The suggested program above presumes that 62 hours of pre-admission requirements and free electives have been earned. As credits earned vary from student to student, please use worksheets, the Anderson website, and check with your BBA Advisor to calculate your earned pre-admission hours.

All students must apply for graduation the semester prior to graduation:

  • November 1 - for Spring graduation
  • April 1 - for Summer graduation
  • July 1 - for Fall graduation

Graduation applications are available at the front desk of the Anderson Advisement Center.


Download the Finance Checklist

Please use this worksheet as a guide to satisfy your graduation requirements. Check off the courses as you complete them to keep track of your progress.

Download the Finance checklist.
View Anderson Course Descriptions.

Questions regarding concentration requirements should be addressed with your BBA advisor or the Finance faculty advisor, Dr. John Schatzberg.


Finance Area Policy For Granting Transfer Credit

(Effective July 1, 2003)
MGMT 326. Conditional Waiver Letter grade of "C-" or better in a basic finance management course within the last 5 years from a college of business with either AACSB accreditation or an existing exchange agreement with the Anderson School of Management. The conditional waiver permits the student to substitute any other Anderson 400 level finance course for MGMT 326.

400 Level Finance Courses Letter grade of "C-" or better in an equivalent course from a finance department or area in an AACSB-accredited college of business or management within the last 5 years. The student may transfer 6 hours of approved upper-division credit toward an ASM finance concentration with pre-approval by the Finance faculty advisor. Transfer of an upper-division finance course satisfies the conditional aspect of the MGMT 326 waiver.


Upper Division Humanities

One 3-hour course, 300-level or above from: American Studies, Classics, Comparative Literature, English, History, Philosophy, Religious Studies