A new study on the history of business education in the U.S. by the Turner College's Kirk Heriot and Neal Thomson , along with Kennesaw State University's Shelby Meek, opens by pointing out that t he introductory business curriculum in the United States has remained largely unchanged since the 1920s, despite dramatic shifts in higher education, business practice, and student needs. As the authors assert, the persistence of historical practice increasingly undermines student success, institutional sustainability, and the relevance of business education. The researchers explain that m ost students encounter business education for the first time through accounting and economics, which are the two courses with the highest national failure and withdrawal rates. High failure rates are also well documented in business statistics, another early-stage gatekeeper, where structural, instructional, and system-level factors all contribute to widespread student di...
Several Turner College and TSYS School students had impressive showings at last week's 2026 Scholastic Honors Convocation on CSU's main campus. Taking home awards from the Turner College were: Accounting Award - Pruthviraj Guduru Finance Award - Joseph Holder Management Award - Rebecca Darko Marketing Award - Teigan Pepit Management Information Systems Award - Keir Etchison MBA Award - Robert Jimerson MSOL Award - Rachel Jenkins Student of Excellence Award - Drew Ashton Picking up awards from the TSYS School were: Software Systems Award - Nicholas Cleplensky Web Development Award - Camille Ahumada Games Programming Award - Conner Mathisen-Weitzel Information Technology Award - Jennifer Jackson Cybersecurity Award - Judson Whiteside Graduate Cybersecurity Defense Award - Yogesh Botcha Graduate Applied Computer Science Award - Dheeraj Kolla Graduate Cybersecurity Management Award - Rahul Raj Student of Excellence Award - Elijah Starkey Turner Business congrat...