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Business Administration Certificate (BAC)
This 3-month program is designed for students who are looking for a short-term program as an introduction to business or to enhance their English in a College setting.

BAC Details
  • 3 months (1 semester)
  • Student who complete the Business Administration Certificate will receive:
    • Canadian College Business Administration Certificate
Program Sequence

CC 139 – 21st Century Communications
This is a fundamental course in Business Mathematics. Topics covered include: Mathematics of Merchandising, Simple Interest, Compound Interest, Annuities, Loan Amortization, and Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis. This course is designed to encourage students to develop mathematical skills and abilities by applying them to common business situations. Regardless of his or her prior math experiences, this course will enhance the learner’s ability to use mathematics to solve problems and make sound decisions from both a career and personal perspective.

CC 140- Communications
This introductory communications course emphasizes the development of reading, writing, listening and speaking business communication skills at a college level. Students write for various purposes and audiences and deliver short presentations to small groups. Students research, analyze, summarize and document information. Students self and peer evaluate written documents and oral presentations. Through reading, media response and discussion exercises, students improve their communication skills. Communicating in diverse teams and across cultures is emphasized.

CC 141 – Marketing 1
Marketing permeates our lives, from the advertising that we are exposed to on a daily basis, to the product decisions we make as consumers, to the need for all of us to communicate with and persuade others in order to accomplish our personal and professional goals. This course is designed to provide the student with an overview of the marketing concept and how it can be applied to any type of organization or service. Students also learn how key marketing concepts, principles, and theories can help marketers make effective decisions, specifically the knowledge and understanding that are needed to assess product, price, promotion and distribution options, and to make marketing mix recommendations for specific target markets.

CC 150  Business Computers 1
This course is the first part of an introduction to the computer skills required in business today. It provides the student with an introduction to computer file management and Microsoft Word and PowerPoint.

CC 130 – Operation Management 1
This course introduces the learner to the operations management profession. An operations manager is concerned with the planning, decision-making and actions required to produce and deliver the organization’s goods and/or services, as opposed to marketing its products, managing its human resources or accounting for its finances. Operations managers work in virtually all enterprises – manufacturing, service, government, for-profit and not-for-profit. Operations managers work in many parts of the organization, including Purchasing and Supply Chain, Inventory Management, Quality Management, Scheduling, Transportation and Logistics, and Front-line Supervision to name a few. This course will introduce the student to the wide range of career opportunities in the Operations Management field, and help participants assess whether they are suited to a career in this fast-paced, highly rewarding field. Areas of study include productivity management, global issues in operations management, forecasting, managing quality, managing the supply chain, and managing inventory.