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Business, Entrepreneurship, & Society

Chicago, Illinois

Academics

The Chicago Programs' curriculum is designed to provide students with a conceptual framework for approaching and synthesizing their academic, work, and personal experiences while living in Chicago.

Students in all three Chicago Programs participate in the team-taught Chicago Core Course, while also completing program-specific work through program seminars, internships, and independent study projectsNote: Students participating in the spring trimester option will take the core course, program seminar, and will have a choice between an internship or an independent study project.

In focusing on business and the liberal arts, the BES program encourages students to consider the organizational, psychological, and sociological aspects of creating and doing business in Chicago.

In stressing an interdisciplinary approach to learning, the program encourages students to reflect upon strategies for integrating what they learn through their coursework, internships, and interactive experiences in Chicago with their on-going academic work on campus.

Additional general information regarding the academic structure, program content, and semester schedules can be found through the appropriate links under "Academics" in the left column of this page. 

Prospective students may also visit the BES program's local website for "real-time" information about the program via the link noted in the caption of the picture on this page.

Program credit

Students should consult with their academic advisors and off-campus study offices before applying to the ACM Chicago Programs.   Most students participating in the semester-long program receive 16 semester hours, or the equivalent, distributed variously as general education, independent, or departmental work.  Students participarting in the spring trimester option should typically receive credits equivalent to a trimester of academic work.  However, the specific terms for receiving and distributing credits are determined by each student's home institution.

ACM and Chicago Programs faculty and staff will be happy to work with students and advisors to provide the appropriate information for facilitating the crediting process.  It is important that these considerations be made before students enter a program.

Local institutional application deadlines

Many institutions require students to submit local applications for off-campus study as a preliminary step to participation in a program.  Such applications may be due well in advance of the ACM application.  Students should consult with their campus advisors for information about local application procedures and deadlines.    

 

 

Business, Entrepreneurship, & Society

Jim Gregory The most beneficial aspect of ACM’s Chicago Programs was the setting. You can learn entrepreneurial theory in any classroom, but being in such a large city, surrounded by a thriving business culture, was a transformative experience that I only now notice, having returned to my small campus. Having met many business owners at various stages of development and being able to speak with them freely and personally about their business struggles made the idea of starting and growing a business more real and achievable. As a small business owner and college student, the things I learned during my participation in the ACM Business, Entrepreneurship, & Society program could be applied directly and instantaneously to my business plan in its day to day execution. I would not have the motivation, determination, and vision toward achieving my business goals had I not experienced this entrepreneurial business program in the extremely supportive and approachable city of Chicago. It changed my life.

—Jim Gregory, Chicago Business, Entrepreneurship, & Society, Fall 2008

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