Program Details
The Mid-America Christian University Master of Arts in Leadership Business Management (MLB) program is for academically
- Location:
- Oklahoma City, United States
- Program Type:
- Full Degree
- Degree Level:
- Master
- Specialty:
- Organizational Leadership
Program Overview
- Program Description:
- The Mid-America Christian University Master of Arts in Leadership Business Management (MLB) program is for academically competent adults who possess at least a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution. The MLB is designed for persons who desire to enhance their business leadership skills and abilities. The program will focus on development of student's leadership skill, and business knowledge in areas including financial accounting, business law, economics, marketing, and project and change management. The program provides the opportunity to study at a level of complexity and specialization that extends the knowledge and intellectual maturity of students who have gained an undergraduate degree, while requiring them to analyze, explore, question, reconsider, and synthesize old and new knowledge and skills. Upon completion of the program, students should have gained sufficient depth of education, specialized skills, and a sense of creative independence that will allow them to practice in and contribute to the business profession. The MLB program provides quality professional instruction from a Christian perspective. The program is designed to provide the opportunity for qualified students to complete the requirements for the degree in approximately 17 months of instruction, while maintaining full-time employment. The MLB program consists of 33 graduate credit hours. Each module is scheduled for one night per week for on-ground students and are sequenced where students take only one course (module) at a time.
Additional Program Information
- Accreditation:
- Recognized institution of higher education with the credentials of accreditation from The Higher Learning Commission and Oklahoma Commission on Teacher Preparation