HRIM Curriculum Proposal Contents

                                                                                             Page

Summary of Proposed Revisions      2

Current Catalog Showing Revisions      5

How the Catalog will Read with Proposed Revisions      7

Planning Guide for Advisement Reflecting Proposed Revisions      9

Related Course Inventory Forms

HRIM187 Introduction to Hospitality Information Mgmt 10

HRIM314 Hospitality Entrepreneurship and Venture Creation        12

HRIM327 Property Engineering    13

HRIM335 Hospitality Facility Design        15

HRIM450 Managing Hospitality Information Systems        16

HRIM483 Hospitality Corporate Finance        18

HRIM Teaching Assignment Forecast Demonstrating that

      Current HRIM Faculty Resources Can Adequately Staff the

      Proposed Curriculum            20

Memorandum of Support, John Hurt, Foreign Languages            21

Documentation of Communication with Kent St. Pierre,

      College of Business and Economics            22

Memorandum of Support, Elizabeth Perse, Communications    23

 

 


Summary of HRIM Curriculum Committee Proposed

Revisions to the HRIM Curriculum

 

This summary outlines the proposed revisions to the HRIM curriculum. These changes represent the first zero based evaluation of the HRIM curriculum since it was founded over fourteen years ago. Over the years there have been incremental changes in the curriculum, but this is the first time the department took the approach of starting from scratch to build a curriculum that is relevant and consistent with the current state of the hospitality industry.

 

A curriculum review committee worked on this task for over a year. The faculty committee sought input from a range of academic and industry resources. Among those consulted was a task force within our HRIM industry advisory board that was charged with providing input into the process. The result is a new curriculum that builds on the strengths of the existing curriculum by providing students improved backgrounds in technology, communications, foreign languages and financial management of hospitality resources. The new curriculum also is designed to help our students get the maximum benefit from the new educational resources made available by the University’s new Courtyard by Marriott Hotel and the Marriott Center for Hospitality and Tourism which will open in the summer of 2003.

 

 

Changes in required courses

1)      A new lodging module has been defined to include:

•   HRIM 327 Property Engineering 

•   HRIM 380 Lodging Management  

•   HRIM 481 Marketing in the Hospitality Industry

•   HRIM 480 Human Resources Management in the Hospitality Industry 

•   HRIM 488 Practicum I

This change adds HRIM 327 Property Engineering to the lodging module while removing HRIM 382 Managerial Accounting and Finance in the Hospitality Industry. HRIM 382 will still be a required course, but it will not be taught within the lodging module. HRIM 327 was previously known as HRIM 280 Property Management. It is being renamed to reflect current industry terminology and being upgraded to a three hundred level because it will now be taken in the junior year. The rigor of the content will be adjusted accordingly.

Justification: The reconfigured junior module clusters courses that will best utilize the HRIM 488 Practicum I in the new hotel being built on campus.

 

2)   Add a new required four hundred level course, HRIM 483 Hospitality Corporate Finance. FINC 200 Fundamentals of Finance will be added as a required course.

      Justification: The existing curriculum does not provide students with a strong enough background in financial management of hospitality resources.

 

3)   Make HRIM 218 Beverage Management a required course.

      Justification: The existing curriculum does not adequately address beverage management issues.

 

4)   New foreign language requirement. HRIM students have been encouraged to take foreign languages to satisfy their six credits of required humanities elective. Students will now be required to take a foreign language to fulfill at least three of those humanities credits. 

      Justification: Foreign language skills are increasingly important in today’s global society. Requiring a foreign language is also consistent with our goal to emphasize “global citizenship” as one of the four foundations of the HRIM curriculum.

 

5)      New requirement: COMM312 Oral Communications is Business.

Justification: Strong public speaking skills are an important tool that HRIM graduates use to run meetings, train staff and communicate ideas in the business world. Furthermore, the HRIM advisory board specifically identified public speaking skills as a critical tool that would strengthen our graduates’ leadership abilities.

 

6)   Drop ACCT 352 Legal and Social Issues as a required course.

Justification: Much of the content is redundant to that in HRIM 482 which adequately serves our students’ needs on its own.

 

7)   Drop BISC 171 Microbiology and Modern Society

Justification: Microbiological issues as they relate to food safety are better taught as a common theme throughout the food and beverage curriculum.

 

8)      Drop HRIM 320 Hotel, Restaurant & General Food Service Purchasing as a required course.

Justification: Limitations on faculty resources and on the number of credits that students can take dictate that some required courses need to be withdrawn to accommodate new courses. Over the years various aspects of the HRIM curriculum have been strengthened so that procurement topics can be adequately covered in other courses.

 

9)   Drop ACCT 160 Introduction to Business Information Systems and replace it with a new course HRIM 187 Introduction to Hospitality Information Systems.

      Justification: Technology is one of the four foundations of our curriculum as stated above. This course will get HRIM students off to a strong start in this area and addresses the specific needs of the hospitality industry. Within the context of this course students will get hands on experience with hospitality specific software in the new Marriott Center for Hospitality and Tourism being built in the University Courtyard by Marriott hotel.  Advisement materials will encourage students to take this course in the first year of study so it can serve as a common foundation that is built on throughout the curriculum.

 


10) Delete HRIM 487 Management Systems in the Hospitality Industry and replace it with a new course HRIM 450 Managing Hospitality Information Systems.

      Justification: Other curricular changes are strengthening the technology components of the curriculum. As such this course needs to evolve to reflect this so that it becomes an upper level capstone to technology issues.

 

 

Changes in elective offerings

 

1)      Consolidate HRIM 311 Contract Management, HRIM 354 Hospitality Franchise Management and HRIM 458 Entrepreneurship in Hospitality into one course entitled Hospitality Entrepreneurship and Venture Creation.

Justification: These courses deal with issues that are so intertwined that it is difficult to talk about them individually without introducing the other concepts. The students would be better served and our faculty resources better utilized by consolidating these three courses into one course that includes the concepts of venture creation, management contracts and franchising.

 

Modification to the 800 hour industry work requirement

HRIM students are currently required to document 800 hours of industry work experience prior to graduation. This requirement will be modified to include 100 hours of documented community service. The modified requirement is for 700 hours of industry work experience plus 100 hours dedicated to community service activities.

Justification: The hospitality industry has a long tradition of community service. Furthermore, hotels and restaurants are uniquely connected to their communities in a way that manufacturing and other service industries are not. For example, a person from Iowa who uses a Delaware issued credit card or drives a Dodge Durango that was assembled in Newark is typically unaware of the community in which these services and products originate. Because hospitality services are by their nature consumed in the host community, hospitality businesses are dependent on the quality of life in their communities. The community service requirement is designed to help our students better appreciate the relationship between host communities and hospitality businesses while developing a stronger sense of citizenship. Service learning is one of the four foundations of the new HRIM curriculum. The community service requirement supports this ideal.

 


DEGREE: BACHELOR OF SCIENCE

MAJOR:  HOTEL, RESTAURANT AND

                INSTITUTIONAL MANAGEMENT

 

CURRICULUM                                                                                       CREDITS

 

UNIVERSITY REQUIREMENTS

ENGL 110            Critical Reading and Writing (minimum grade C-)…………………………....3

Three credits in an approved course or courses stressing ……………………………………..3

Multicultural, ethnic, and/or gender-related content (see p. 57)

 

MAJOR REQUIREMENTS

COMM 312                        Oral Communication in Business……………………………………….……....3

ENGL  312                         Written Communications in Business………………………………..…..….....3

Foreign Language Elective ………………………………………………………………………...3

Humanities Elective from...……………………………………………………………………..…..3

Art History, History, English (except composition or similar course), Philosophy, Music

(except for participation in instrumental and/or choral organization), Theatre, Comparative

Literature and literature courses in a foreign language.

MATH 114 or MATH 170 College Mathematics and Statistics

Or

MATH 115 or MATH 171 Pre-Calculus.……………………………………………………….. ....3

Or

Successful performance on the proficiency test in mathematics administered by the

Department of Mathematical Sciences.

STAT 200             Basic Statistical Practice

Or

MATH 201            Introduction to Statistics …………………………………………………….....3

NTDT 200             Nutrition Concepts (minimum grade C-)……………………………………...3

Science Electives …………………………………………………………………………………..6

PSYC 201             General Psychology……………………………………………………………..3

ECON 100             Economic Issues and Policies

Or

ECON 151/152            Introduction to Microeconomics/Macroeconomics…………………………3-6

Sociology Elective (following course recommended):…………………………………………..3

SOCI 201             Introduction to Sociology

ACCT 200            Survey of Accounting

Or

ACCT 207/208    Accounting I and II …………………………………………………………..4-6

>>>FINC 200            Fundamentals of Finance……………………………………………………..3

BAUD 301          Introduction to Marketing………………………………………………..........3

BAUD 309         Management and Organizational Behavior……………………………........3

HRIM 180          Introduction to Hospitality…………………………………………………......3

HRIM 187           Introduction to Hospitality Information Management………………….....…3

HRIM 201          Food Principles…………………………………………………..........……….3

HRIM 211          Food Principles Laboratory…………………………………………….....…..3

HRIM 218          Beverage Management…………………………………………………….....3

HRIM 321          Quantity Food Service Management……………………………………......3

HRIM 325          Laboratory in Quantity Food Service Management……………………......3

HRIM 327          Property Engineering................................................................................3

HRIM 380          Management of Lodging Operations…………………………………….......3

HRIM 381           Management of Food and Beverage Operations…………………….........3

HRIM 382          Managerial Accounting and Finance in the Hospitality Industry…….....…3

HRIM 480          Human Resources Management in the Hospitality Industry………….......3

HRIM 481          Marketing in the Hospitality Industry…………………………………..........3

HRIM 482          Law of Innkeeping…………………………………………………….....…….3

HRIM 483            Hospitality Corporate Finance………………………………………………..3    

HRIM 450          Managing Hospitality Information Systems……...…………………….....…3

HRIM 488          HRIM Practicum I………………………………………………………….......4

HRIM 489          HRIM Practicum II………………………………………………………..........6

All HRIM courses require a minimum grade of C-..

 

The HRIM program requires 700 hours of industry work experience, in two parts:

  1. 400 hours of documented hospitality work experience is encouraged prior to the junior year.
  2. A total of 700 or more hours of approved work experience is required for clearance for graduation.

The HRIM program also requires an additional 100 hours of approved community service activities.

 

ELECTIVES

After required courses are completed, sufficient elective credits must be taken to meet the minimum credits required for the degree.

May include Military Science, Music, or Physical Education. (Only two credits of activity-type Physical Education and four credits of Music ensemble and four credits of 100- and 200- level courses in Military Science/Air Force may be counted toward the degree).  Students are encouraged to develop fluency in a second language.

 

CREDITS TO TOTAL A MINIMUM OF ……………………………………..………………..120

.


 

 

 HOTEL, RESTAURANT AND INSTITUTIONAL MANAGEMENT (HRIM)

Proposed Planning Guide – FOR DISCUSSION ONLY

 

Name of Student ___________________                             GPA  __________

 

Name of Advisor ___________________                             Date Advised __________

 

Student I.D. #  ___________________                                         Catalog Date __________

FRESHMAN YEAR

___ ___         Introduction to Hospitality, HRIM180

3

___ ___       Food Principles, HRIM 201

 

2

___ ___         Nutrition Concepts, NTDT200

3

___ ___       Food Principles Lab, HRIM 211

1

___ ___         Introduction to Economics, ECON100*

3

___ ___       Intro. To Hospitality Info. Mgt., HRIM187

3

___ ___         MATH 114, or proficiency test

3

___ ___       Critical Reading and Writing, ENGL110________

3

___ ___         Elective ___________________________

3

___ ___       Science_____________________________

3

 

 

___ ___      Elective ___________________________

3

Totals:

15

Totals:

15

SOPHOMORE YEAR

___ ___         General Psychology, PSYC201

3

___ ___         Sociology Elective (see catalog)

3

___ ___         Intro to Statistics, STAT200 or MATH 201

3

___ ___         Beverage Management, HRIM 218

3

___ ___         Accounting, ACCT200    **

4

___ ___         Science  ___________________________

 

3

___ ___         Elective ___________________________

3

___ ___         Humanities (language recommended)___________________

3

___ ___         Foreign Language Elective ______________

3

___ ___         Fundamentals of Finance, FINC 200

3

Total:

16

Total:

15

JUNIOR YEAR

___ ___         Qty. Food, Prod & Svs, HRIM321

2

                ***** LODGING MODULE

 

___ ___         Qty. Food, Prod & Svs lab, HRIM325

2

___ ___         HRIM Practicum, HRIM488

4

___ ___         Oral Communication in Business, COMM312

3

___ ___       Marketing/Hospitality Industry, HRIM481

3

 

___ ___         Managerial Accounting & Finance, HRIM382

3

___ ___         Property Engineering, HRIM280 

3

___ ___         Introduction to Marketing, BUAD301 ***

3

___ ___         Human Resources Management in the

                     Hospitality Industry, HRIM480

3

___ ___         HRIM Technology Elective ______________________

3

___ ___         Mgmt. of Lodging Operations, HRIM380

3

Total:

16

Total:

16

SENIOR YEAR

___ ___         HRIM Practicum II, HRIM489

6

___ ___         Law of Innkeeping, HRIM482

3

___ ___         Management of Food & Beverage

                     Operations, HRIM381

3

___ ___         Managing Hospitality Info. Systems, HRIM 450

3

___ ___         Written Comm. in Business, ENGL312

3

___ ___         Mgmt & Organization Beh, BUAD309 ***

3

___ ___      Elective ___________________________

3

___ ___         Elective __________________________

3

 

 

 

 

Total:

15

Total:

12