International Business Fundamentals – BBB4M

Course Prerequisite

None

Description

This course provides an overview of the importance of international business and trade in the global economy and explores the factors that influence success in international markets. Students will learn about the techniques and strategies associated with marketing, distribution, and managing international business effectively. This course prepares students for postsecondary programs in business, including international business, marketing, and management.  

Course Info

Course Outline & Units

Unit Order

Unit Name

Suggested Time

Unit 1

The Global Environment for Business 

 

30 hours
Unit 2

Business and Trade 

18 hours
Unit 3

Factors Influencing Success in International Markets 

24 hours
Unit 4

Marketing Challenges, Approaches, and Distribution 

24 hours
Unit 5

World Markets and Careers 

14 hours
Final Evaluation 30%

Final Project   

Final Exam  

6 hours  

2 hours  

Total 110 Hours
Learning Strategies

A wide variety of instructional strategies are used to provide learning opportunities to accommodate a variety of learning styles, interests and ability levels. These strategies include, but are not limited to:

  • Whole-class, small group, and individual instruction;
  • Class activities that allow students to work individually, in pairs and small groups, and in large groups;
  • Teacher-led discussion, Socratic lessons, and lectures to provide knowledge and develop skills
  • Use of case studies to develop students’ problem-solving skills. Students should be given a model of analyzing case studies and should be aware that there is no single correct solution to any given problem.
  • Provide opportunities to develop concepts themselves from observed data;
  • Electronic technology – use of videos, tapes, internet resources;
  • Computer technology – reports, spreadsheets, flow charts data bases, electronic presentation;
  • Encourage maximum student participation in classroom activities;
  • Share the rubrics for culminating activities at the beginning of the unit, so expectations are clear
  • Guest speakers from the business community
  • Identify & address different learning styles throughout the course;
  • Use self- and peer assessments;
  • Encourage brainstorming, exchange of ideas, debating;
  • Use of interviewing and researching as learning tools; accessing, selecting and analyzing information;
  • Lecture note-taking, examination preparation, multiple choice test taking skills, in-depth, independent research, report writing, time management;
  • Connect with expectations from other subjects’ areas, where appropriate;
  • Connect material to local, national and international community;
  • Respect cultural differences of international students

Additional Teaching/Learning Strategies for International Students

  • Provide vocabulary of business terms;
  • Use visuals to illustrate definitions for students’ dictionary of terms;
  • Permit use of translation dictionary on assessments;
  • Provide additional time on assessments for dictionary use and processing language;
  • Provide reference notes, outlines of critical information, models of charts, timelines, or diagrams;
  • Organize information in chart/graph format
  • Provide resources with appropriate reading level when research required;
  • Provide handout sheets with sample calculations and specific skill instructions;
  • Provide students with clear directions for improvement;
  • Pair written instructions with verbal instructions. Provide visual or auditory cues;
  • Simplify instructions. Highlight key words or phrases;
  • Provide opportunities for students to practise oral presentation skills;
  • Encourage repetition, clarification, and restatement;
  • Use reading/listening activities;
  • Permit a wide variety of options for recording and reporting their work, e.g., diagrams, flow charts, concept maps;
  • Student conferences
Course FAQ
The course duration is 110 hours, delivered in an online school format. 
The course fee is based on the selected option of Online Instructor-Class Credit For detailed information and pricing, please check our website.
Assessment & Resources

Purpose   

The primary purpose of assessment is to improve student learning. Assessment relates directly to the expectations for the course.

A variety of assessments for and as learning are conducted on a regular basis to allow ample opportunities for students to improve and ultimately demonstrate their full range of learning and for the teacher to gather information to provide feedback. Assessment tasks relate to the success criteria set out in lesson plans. Success criteria allow students to see what quality looks like.

Evaluation is the process of judging the quality of student work in relation to the achievement chart categories and criteria and assigning a percentage grade to represent that quality. Evaluation is based on gathering evidence of student achievement through:

  • Products
  • Observations
  • Conversations

Assessment for Learning – we provide feedback and coaching. Assessment FOR Learning is the process of seeking and interpreting evidence for the use of learners and their teachers to decide where the learners are in their learning, where they need to go, and how best to go there.

Assessment as Learning – we help students monitor progress, set goals, reflect on their learning

Assessment AS Learning is the process of the explicit fostering of students’ capacity over time to be their own best assessors, but teachers need to start by presenting and modeling external, structured opportunities for students to assess themselves.

Assessment of Learning – we use assessments to provide evaluative statements about student achievement. Assessment OF Learning is the assessment that becomes public and results in statements of symbols

(marks/grades/levels of achievement) about how well students are learning. It often contributes to pivotal decisions that will affect students’ future.

Assessment & Evaluation Components

There are four levels of achievement for students who are passing this course:

Level 1 –  (50-52%)                      Level 3 –  (70-72%)

Level 1    (53-56%)                      Level 3    (73-76%)

Level 1+  (57-59%)                      Level 3 +  (77-79%)

Level 2 –  (60-62%)                      Level 4 –  (80-86%)

Level 2    (63-66%)                      Level 4    (87-94%)

Level 2 +  (67-69%)                     Level 4 +  (95-100%)

Level 3 is the provincial standard for student achievement.

A wide range of assessment strategies (tests, portfolios, journals, essays, presentations, observation, conferencing and projects), combined with an array of instrument tools (including detailed marking schemes, checklists, rubrics and exemplars), is used in order to measure student achievement of overall course expectations.

Portfolio Assessment

A Portfolio Log will be kept by each group, containing selected documents related to a specific trade relationship. The portfolio requirements will be introduced at the beginning of the course. The students will be supplied with a portfolio checklist (Appendix A). The checklist becomes a formative assessment tool for the students.

The portfolio has a clear purpose: to accumulate student work for the Final Project. Students will need teacher direction on which pieces of work are to be used. The portfolio is a tool to store and organize student work. The teacher and students establish the form the portfolio will take and select the contents for the portfolio (rough drafts, best work or work that needs revisions, school material or material from outside the school). At the end of each unit, the teacher/students determine the work to be placed in the portfolio

Resources 

Growing Success: Assessment, Evaluation and Reporting in Ontario Schools (2010)

http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/policyfunding/growSuccess.pdf

International Business, Canada and Global Trade, Schultz, Notman & Hernder. Thomson & Nelson, January, 2003

Definitive Guide Series, Royal Bank of Canada

Magazines& Newspapers:

Local and international newsprint

Canadian and international trade and business

Video: The World of Business, Video Series

Course Final Grade & Report Card

Grading  

  • The final grade is based on performance in 3 areas: products, observations, conversations.
  • 70% of the grade is based on evaluations conducted throughout the course.
  • 30% is based on a final evaluation.

Weighting of categories 

Knowledge/Understanding  Thinking/Inquiry  Communication  Application 
25%  25%  25%  25% 
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Course Grade

Grade 12

Course Code

BBB4M

Course Category

Social Sciences and Humanities

Course Type

University/College Preparation

Course Delivery

Online

Course Duration

110h

Course Credit

1.00
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