For the incoming future exchangers and Aalto-BIZ here's a review of the courses ("units") that I took this semester.
CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR, MKTG1204
2h lecture, 1h tute
· Text book
· Weekly assignments to submit online and go
through during tute (analysis based on text book and/or operative observing
tasks out in the “real world”) 35%
· Tutorial participation (separated from the
assignments) 15%
· Mid-sem exam (MCQ) 20%
· Final exam (MCQ) 30%
Handles theories of
psychology, real cases and examples and advertising effects. A quite
interesting, easy-going and more creative unit. Nothing too hard except for
memorizing some definitions and theories in order to excel in the multiple
choices exam. Otherwise lectures and assignments were chilled out analyzing,
mainly discussing ads, brands and trends with no right answers really, and argumentation
based on theories. Level 1 unit.
ENTERPRISE SYSTEMS, MGMT3335
· 2h lecture, 1h tutorial/lab per week
·
Text book
· Weekly assignments to go through during the
tutes (Short answers, definitions or lab exercises) 10%
· Every other week recorded lectures online,
otherwise face-to-face lectures
· Group assignment (Proposal and a 20-page report
for a real organization) 30%
· Mid-term exam (MCQ online) 10%
· Final exam (paper) 50%
Handles information systems and their
(implementation) management. Way too much work and readingsfor something that
could be very practical. Not my favorite unit. Part of the course was very
practical actually using the SAP and Signavio during labs, but half of it was
like some ERP philosophy, and during
the other half I felt like the whole unit was there just to advertise SAP program. However, I chose the unit for the new skillset. I liked
the online lectures, lots of compact, shorter, straight forward online
recordings instead of actual f2f lectures, but unfortunately most of the
content, studying and memorizing the ERP philosophy or never-ending
implementation management "guidance" from a book (three hundred pages about ERP
implementation management, mainly reminding you how hard it is without giving much advice how to actually do it), really wasn’t my thing. Level 3 unit.
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE, ECON3236
· 2h lecture, 1h tute
· Text book, no lecture slides
· Weekly assignments to go through during tute
(calculations from the text book usually) 10%
· Mid-semester test 25%
· Final exam 65%
· Handles tools related to exchange rates mainly. I
liked the clearness of the unit, very informative, straight forward, compact
and clear package. Strongly relying on
formulas and derivation though, and lots of facts and definitions, you can make
it far simply by reading the book. Not exactly the most inspiring unit, but I
believe this unit can be useful to understand for example banking better. However
there’s lot of memorizing in order to get accurate definitions and so on, no applied
real life cases. Despite the name, the unit is under economics, not finance. Level 3 unit.
RISE OF GLOBAL ECONOMY, ECON2105
· 2h lecture, 1h tute
· Articles (contemporary issues etc) and short
online recordings (in addition to face-to-face lectures), no text book
· Weekly assignments to go through during tutes (short
essays) 10%
· Mid-semester test 20%
· Final exam 70%
· Our tutor told us this unit to be like the
movie “The Big Short”. Very interesting course, mainly contemporary issues and economic
happenings discussed, some theory to reason and justify these happenings, actually
liked the content a lot! Most of the theory was something I had already studied
earlier but still interesting because the unit included happenings that are not
paid attention in Finland and more or less different kind of points of views in
general. Shortly, the unit was like reading newspaper’s economics section and
analyzing the news carefully. The structure and the content was pretty much the
opposite to clear and theory-based International Finance’s.
Thank you for reading. At least one more fun post coming later on, from Asia! :)
Cheers, Anni
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