Bachelor of Commerce

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Bachelor of Commerce (abbreviated BCom, B.Com., BComm, BComm Degree or B.Comm.) is an undergraduate degree in commerce and related subjects. The degree is also known as the Bachelor of Commerce and Administration, or BCA. It is predominantly offered in Commonwealth nations; however, the degree is no longer offered in the United Kingdom.

Structure

Curriculum

Bachelor of Commerce

The Bachelor of Commerce degree is a full-time three-year program designed to provide the student with a wide range of managerial skills while at the same time building competence in a particular area. Most universities therefore plan the degree such that additional to their major, students are exposed to general business principles, and required accounting, economic and quantitative skills. For a comparison with other degrees in business and management, see further under Bachelor's degree.

Honours Bachelor of Commerce

An Honours Bachelor of Commerce (H.B. Comm.) degree is a four-year degree and is taken subsequent to the three year Bachelor of Commerce. The H.B. Commerce degree consists of a single-year full-time program. The degree requires more academic courses with a researched thesis component and is an abridgement between the undergraduate program and the postgraduate programs, including but not limited too: the Master of Commerce or Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) degrees.

Duration

The precise requirements for the degree vary, and the course structure tends to vary in different countries. The curriculum generally lasts three years in Australia, New Zealand, India, Malta, South Africa, the United States of America, parts of Canada, Hong Kong and the United Kingdom, and four years in majority of Canada, Republic of Ireland, Ghana, Philippines and the Netherlands. In South Africa, and some universities in India, many students extend their studies to a fourth "Honours" year [BCom (Hons)] - an additional postgraduate qualification - usually focused exclusively on one subject. In Malta, the additional year is not considered as a postgraduate qualification. In Pakistan, BCom is of two-years, BCom (Hons) of three-years; while a four-year program is known as BS/BS (Hons) Commerce.

Areas of study

Depending on the institution, a formal academic major may or may not be established. Regardless, the Bachelor of Commerce requires students to take the majority of their courses in business-related subjects, namely the following and others depending on students' particular interests.

Further study

A BCom graduate may pursue the Master of Commerce, or other post-graduate masters programs such as the Master of Finance (MFin), Master of Accounting (MAcc), Master in Business Administration (MBA). The degree - with appropriate courses - is usually recognised by the various professional accounting bodies, and graduates often therefore pursue accounting designations such as the Chartered Accountant (CA), Certified Public Accountant (CPA), Certified Management Accountant (CMA) or Certified General Accountant (CGA). Graduates also commonly pursue professional certifications such as the CFA, CIM and PMP.

History

The Bachelor of Commerce degree was first offered at the University of Birmingham. The University's School of Commerce was founded by William Ashley, an Englishman from Oxford University, who was the first Professor of Political Economy and Constitutional History in the Faculty of Arts of the University of Toronto. Ashley left Toronto in 1892, spent a few years at Harvard University and then went back to England to the new University of Birmingham where he founded the School of Commerce and began the program - the forerunner of many BCom degree programs throughout the British Empire. Eighteenth-century economists had divided the English economy into three sectors: agriculture, manufacturing, and commerce. Commerce included the transportation, marketing, and financing of goods. The Birmingham program included economic geography, economic history, general economics, modern languages, and accountancy.

See also

References

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