IUPUI Bulletins » Schools » Kelley School of Business » Undergraduate » Student Learning Outcomes


Student Learning Outcomes

The Kelley School of Business has adopted and supports these Principles of Undergraduate Business Learning. These principles are tailored and prioritized to the needs of a business education and reflect the intellectual competence and cultural and ethical awareness that every Kelley School of Business graduate should attain.

Faculty members in each discipline have been charged with determining which of the principles will be taught and assessed in each of their courses – and what graduates in that major will know and be able to do to illustrate competence in each of the four areas addressed by these principles.

Instructors must distribute the principles to students with descriptions of how the principles are enacted in the course. These Student Learning Outcomes apply to all undergraduate degree programs.

  1. Critical Thinking
    The ability to synthesize and analyze information and ideas from multiple sources and perspectives:
    1. to arrive at reasoned conclusions and informed decisions
    2. and to solve challenging problems
    3. by evaluating the logic, validity, and relevance of data
    4. and using knowledge in order to generate and explore questions.
  1. Management, Leadership, and Ethics
    The ability to make judgments with respect to individual and organizational conduct concerning citizenship, ethics, and the value of diversity in business:
    1. in order to make informed and principled choices regarding conflicting situations in personal, business, and public lives
    2. and to foresee the consequences of those choices.
  1. Communication
    1. Written Communication
      The ability to analyze, interpret, and comprehend information sources and technology:
      • to effectively express ideas and facts
      • in a variet of written and visual formats.
    2. Collaboration and Oral Communication
      The ability to engage in active and professional communications and dialogue in business and the community:
      • to encourage, examine, and comprehend the viewpoints of others
      • by being effective in one-on-one and in group settings
      • in order to operate with civility and cooperation in a complex, diverse, and global business and social world.
  1. Professional Skills and Competencies
    The ability to obtain substantial knowledge and understanding in at least one field of study while gaining exposure and knowledge in other related disciplines:
    1. to meet professional standards and demonstrate important skills and competencies, and
    2. to make efficient use of information and technology resources for intellectual, professional, community and personal needs.

Updated 5/19