Where Leadership and Finance Intersect

At Emmanuel College, the management major with a concentration in accounting prepares you to lead in today’s business world. You’ll learn to analyze data, manage people and projects, and make ethical decisions that help organizations thrive.

Your courses will cover business strategy, leadership, and organizational behavior while deepening your expertise in auditing, taxation, and accounting information systems. Backed by Emmanuel’s liberal arts foundation, you’ll build the critical thinking, problem-solving, and communication skills employers value.

Located in Boston, Emmanuel connects your classroom learning with real-world business environments, preparing you for careers in management, accounting, or graduate study.

The Curriculum

View the 2024-2025 Academic Catalog to find course titles, numbers and descriptions.

Requirements for a B.A. in Management with a concentration in Accounting

In addition to courses required for the management major, students take 12 credits from courses listed below. They must also complete their Management Internship (MGMT3496) in an accounting related position.

Requirements for Concentration (Select three courses):

  • ACCT2203 Intermediate Accounting I
  • ACCT2204 Intermediate Accounting II
  • ACCT3203 Auditing and Assurance Services
  • ACCT3206 Cost Accounting
  • ACCT3411 Federal Income Tax
  • ACCT3413 Accounting Information Systems

At the completion of the Management Major, students will:

  1. Be able to address issues of personal and social responsibility in their organizations and communities.
  2. Have fundamental knowledge of concepts and analytical tools within management, business, and economics and be able to apply this knowledge to the analysis and resolution of management problems and situations at work.
  3. Communicate effectively: orally and in writing, using concepts and analytical tools from management, business and economics.
  4. Better understand-their values, their strengths, their weaknesses and their interests-and be able to apply this self-knowledge to job and career path decisions.