| 
The
following is a list of ABE undergraduate courses; the course
number is first, followed by credit hours in parentheses,
the course title, and a short description of the class.
204
(3): Introduction to Agricultural Economics. Agriculture
in local and national economy; distribution; size and organization
of the farm business units; policies affecting agriculture.
257
(1-10): Work Experience. Credit for on-campus work experience
through a cooperative program developed between the Department
and the Office of Student Work and Financial Assistance.
Prerequisite: consent of Chair. Mandatory Pass/Fail.
258
(1-30): Past Work Experience. Credit for career related
employment based on the evaluation of the documentation
of this experience by the Department of Agribusiness Economics.
No grade for past work experience. Prerequisite: consent
of Chair.
302
(2): Country Living Management and Information. Managing
a small acreage as an avocation. Types of decision problems
and sources of information.
318
(3): Agribusiness Statistical Methods. Statistical methods
applied to agribusiness economics, including survey design,
sampling, graphic presentation of data, index numbers, statistical
inference, basic linear regression and correlation.
333
(3): Professional Agriselling. Focuses on professional
agriselling and the sales process. Topics include different
methods of selling, steps and techniques in the selling
process, customer service, sales ethics, consumer behavior
concepts and sales management. Critical skills of self-management,
communication, and interpersonal values are examined. Opportunities
of a career in agriselling are surveyed.
340
(3): Food and Agricultural Policy. An economic analysis
of the structure, problems, and alternative public policies
of the food production industry. Emphasis on price, income,
foreign trade, and development policies. Prerequisite: 204
or consent of instructor.
350
(3): Farm Management. Efficient organization and
management of a farming operation. Emphasis on crop and
livestock selection, management of farm resources, farm
budgets and records analysis, and farm leases. Student will
incur field trip expenses not to exceed $5. Prerequisite:
204 or one course in economics.
351
(3): Financial Management in Agriculture. Analysis
of the capital structure of agriculture and sources of capital.
Credit analysis of agribusiness firms using financial statements,
firm growth, capital budgeting, and tax considerations.
Prerequisite: 204 or equivalent.
359
(1- 6): Intern Program. Supervised work experience program
in either an agricultural agency of the government or agribusiness.
Prerequisite: junior standing or consent of instructor.
Mandatory Pass/Fail.
360
(3): Cooperatives and Agribusiness Management. Problems
and practices in agribusiness operation including forms
of organization, alternative organization and structure
impacts on decision-making, tools of decision-making, financial
analysis and methods of improving the effectiveness of the
marketing system. Prerequisite: 204 or
equivalent.
361
(2): Distribution in Agribusiness. The nature of agribusiness
distribution, opportunities to improve the effectiveness
of the distribution system through an understanding of the
function involved. Prerequisite: 204
or equivalent.
362
(3): Marketing and Pricing Agricultural Products.
Institutional arrangements in marketing agricultural products.
Market structure, marketing costs, and alternative methods
of pricing agricultural products are also examined. Prerequisite:
204 or equivalent.
363
(3): Commodity Futures Market. The mechanics of
futures market trading, a description of institutions, technical
and fundamental analysis, speculation, hedging, spreading,
and market risk. Agricultural commodities, exchange rates,
and financial instruments are considered.
381
(1-4): Agricultural Seminar. Discussion of special
topics and/or problems in the field of agribusiness economics.
Prerequisite: junior standing and consent of Department.
388
(1-16): International Studies. Course work undertaken
as a part of an approved University residential study program
abroad. May be taken for a maximum of eight semester hours
per semester and may be repeated for a maximum of 16 semester
hours. Prerequisite: major Department or program approval.
390
(1-4): Special Studies in Agribusiness Economics. Assignments
involving research and individual problems. Field trips.
Prerequisite: consent of Chair.
391
(1-4): Honors Program in Agribusiness Economics. Completion
of honors paper or comparable project under the supervision
of one or more faculty members. Subject matter depends upon
the needs and interests of the student. Prerequisite: junior,
GPA 3.0 with a 3.25 in major; approval of staff member,
Department Chair.
401
(3): Agricultural Law. Relations of common-law principles
and statutory law to land tenure, farm tenancy, farm labor,
farm management, taxation, and other problems involving
agriculture. Prerequisite: junior standing or consent of
instructor.
402
(1-6): Problems in Agribusiness Economics. Designed
to improve the techniques of agribusiness economics workers
through discussion, assignment, and special workshops on
problems related to their field. Emphasis will be placed
on new innovative and currently developed techniques for
the field. Prerequisite: consent of Chair.
419
(3): Agribusiness
Economic Applications of Information Technology.
Students will gain experience in applying information technology
to a range of agribusiness-economic applications in the
subject areas of record keeping, management, finance and
marketing. Students will gain additional experience by integrating
these applications in the development of a business plan.
Not for graduate credit. Prerequisite: 350
or 351 or 360 and
General Agriculture 318 or equivalent.
440
(3): Land Resource Economics. The use of land as an
economic variable in production of goods and services; land
markets; public versus private land use conflicts; and land-use
planning in an institutional setting. Prerequisite: 12 hours
of agricultural economics or economics credit, or graduate
status or consent of instructor.
444
(3): Agricultural Development. Analysis of the economic,
social, political, cultural, and institutional factors related
to economic growth and development in agricultural sector.
Framework for evaluating outcome of alternative strategies
in agricultural production, marketing, and government policies
that affect output, income distribution, and resource use
in agriculture and the related agroindustrial complex. Prerequisite:
204.
450
(3): Advanced
Farm Management. Application of production economic
principles and modern decision-making techniques to farm
management problems. The importance of information, sources
of agricultural risk and management of risk in farm planning
will be integrated. Prerequisite: 350
or equivalent and Mathematics required.
451
(2): Farm Real
Estate Appraisal. Principles and practices of farm
real estate appraisal. Application of capitalization, market,
and cost approaches for estimating market value. Understanding
of special valuation methods used for buildings, insurance,
assessments, loans, and condemnation. Field trips not to
exceed $10. Prerequisite: 350 or consent
of instructor.
453
(3): Agribusiness
Planning Techniques. Application of mathematical
programming to agribusiness and farm planning, including
enterprise selection, resource allocation, lease cost ration
formulation, decision-making under risk and uncertainty,
transportation and location problems. Emphasis placed on
modeling problems and interpretation of results. Prerequisite:
junior standing or consent of instructor.
460
(3): Agricultural Prices. Measurement and interpretation
of factors affecting agricultural prices. Construction of
index numbers, trend analysis, seasonal and cyclical price
movements and the measurement of relationships between price
and other variables. Prerequisite: 362
or equivalent.
461
(3): Agriculture Business Management. Examination of
agribusiness firms management with emphasis on the management
and control of financial resources and the interrelationship
between the agribusiness firm and human resource management.
Other topics in agribusiness will include effective communication
in the management process, business ethics, and workable
credit programs for customers. Prerequisite: 351
and 360 or equivalent.
462
(3): Advanced Agricultural Marketing. Advanced treatment
of marketing issues from both theoretical and practical
decision-making perspectives. Marketing margins, intertemporal,
and spatial price relationships are reviewed in detail.
Historical and current grain and livestock price series
are utilized in decision-making exercises. Prerequisite:
362 or equivalent. |