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New MIS and
Business Analytics Curriculum

Gonzaga's MIS discipline is launching a redesigned curriculum — a shared two-course foundation, two distinct concentration pathways, and the ability to double-concentrate within your degree.

Core + Concentration
Every student begins with the same two required courses. From there, choose your concentration — or both.
MIS Concentration · 12 credits total

Management Information Systems

BMIS 301
Systems Analysis & Design with Programming
NEW
BMIS 302
Database Management and Architecture
NEW
BMIS 447
Applied AI in Business
NEW
— or —
BMIS 489
Special Topics in MIS
BMIS 443
Tech for Mobile/Web Business
BMIS 445
Analytics Practicum
BFIN 324*
Financial Modeling
ACCT 311*
Accounting Analytics
MKTG 421*
Advanced Marketing Analytics
Business Analytics Concentration · 15 credits total

Business Analytics

BMIS 301
Systems Analysis & Design with Programming
NEW
BMIS 302
Database Management and Architecture
NEW
BMIS 342
Business Analytics
ECON 355
Regression Analysis
BMIS 445
Analytics Practicum
BFIN 324*
Financial Modeling
ACCT 311*
Accounting Analytics
MKTG 421*
Advanced Marketing Analytics
* Discipline elective — available to students concentrating in Finance (BFIN 324), majoring in Accounting (ACCT 311), or majoring in Marketing (MKTG 421). Requires advisor approval.
🔀 Want to double concentrate in MIS and Business Analytics? →
Double Count Your Analytics Course
Students concentrating in Finance or majoring in Accounting or Marketing can apply a discipline-specific analytics course as their Group 2 or elective requirement — building analytics depth in their own field while satisfying MIS discipline requirements.
Finance Concentration
BFIN 324
Financial Modeling
Counts as: MIS Group 2 elective · BA elective
Accounting Major
ACCT 311
Accounting Analytics
Counts as: MIS Group 2 elective · BA elective
Marketing Major
MKTG 421
Advanced Marketing Analytics
Counts as: MIS Group 2 elective · BA elective
These substitutions require advisor approval. Bring your proposed degree plan to an advising appointment to confirm eligibility.
← Back to Curriculum
MIS + Business Analytics · 24 credits total
Students who want both concentrations can complete them within their degree. The shared core and strategic double-counting rules make a MIS + BA double concentration achievable.
The Rules
🔢

9 Unique Credits Required

To earn both concentrations, you must complete at least 9 credits that are unique to one concentration — not shared with the other.

🔀

BMIS 301 Double Counts

BMIS 301 satisfies the shared core requirement for both the MIS and BA concentrations. Take it once; it counts toward both.

🔄

BMIS 302 Can Be Replaced in MIS

In the MIS path, BMIS 302 can be replaced by BMIS 447 or BMIS 489 — allowing students who take BMIS 302 for BA to satisfy the MIS core with a different course.

Each Concentration Must Be Complete

All individual requirements for each concentration must be satisfied. Shared credits count toward both, but each concentration's full credit requirement applies.

Sample Double Concentration Plan

One example of how to complete both concentrations. Course order and elective selection may vary.

Complete First

Business Analytics Concentration (15 cr)

BMIS 301Systems Analysis & Design with Programmingdouble counts
BMIS 302Database Management and Architecture
BMIS 342Business Analytics
ECON 355Regression Analysis
BMIS 445Analytics Practicum
Add 9 Unique Credits

MIS Concentration (9 unique cr)

BMIS 301Already completed — double counts✓ done
BMIS 447Applied AI in Business (replaces BMIS 302)
BMIS 489Special Topics in MIS
BMIS 443Tech for Mobile/Web Business
Total courses: BMIS 301, 302, 342, 447, 489, 443 + ECON 355. BMIS 301 is the only course that double-counts. Speak with your advisor to confirm your degree plan.
Your Courses Still Count
No students will be delayed in graduation. Courses completed under the legacy curriculum map directly to the new structure through established equivalencies. No formal teach-out is needed.
Legacy Course (discontinued) Counts As in New Structure
BMIS 331 — Problem Solving with Programming Techniques BMIS 301 — Systems Analysis and Design with Programming
BMIS 441 — Database Management BMIS 302 — Database Management and Architecture
BMIS 444 — Information Systems Analysis and Design MIS Group 1 Elective
Your Situation
1

Completed BMIS 331 and/or BMIS 441 only

File course substitutions using the equivalency table above. You'll move to the new structure with added elective flexibility to complete your degree.

2

MIS student — completed BMIS 331, 441, and 444

BMIS 331 → BMIS 301. BMIS 441 → BMIS 302. BMIS 444 counts as a Group 1 elective. Choose one more elective to finish under the new structure.

3

BA student — completed BMIS 331, 441, 342, 445, ECON 355

All legacy BA courses continue to be offered through the transition period. You may complete under your original catalog year — no changes required, no graduation delay.

MIS Discipline Course Descriptions
All courses that count toward the MIS or Business Analytics concentration, with descriptions and semester availability.
BMIS 301 · 3 credits
Systems Analysis and Design with Programming Techniques
Fall · Spring

Introduces students to how organizations analyze business needs and develop technology solutions. Covers the phases of systems development, requirements gathering, process modeling, and infrastructure evaluation alongside a foundation in programming — including problem-solving strategies, functions, classes, and object-oriented concepts. Students leave able to bridge the gap between a business problem and a technical solution.

Core — both concentrationsNewMISBA
BMIS 302 · 3 credits
Database Management and Architecture
Fall · Spring

Develops foundational competency in relational database design, SQL querying, and database administration — then extends into applied business analytics. Students gain hands-on experience with Power BI dashboards, ETL processes, workflow automation, and the governance principles that underpin responsible data use. Prepares students for upper-division analytics and information systems coursework.

Core — both concentrationsNewMISBA
BMIS 342 · 3 credits
Business Analytics
Fall

A focused exploration of quantitative methods and analytical tools used to support business decision-making. Students apply data analysis techniques to real business problems, developing the ability to interpret results and communicate findings to non-technical stakeholders. Emphasis on translating data into actionable insight across functional areas including operations, marketing, and finance.

BA Required
BMIS 443 · 3 credits
Tech for Mobile and Web Business
Fall · Spring

Examines how mobile and web technologies create and disrupt business models. Students develop a working understanding of web and mobile application architecture, user experience principles, and the technical decisions that shape digital products. Includes hands-on exploration of platforms used in modern digital business. Suitable for students interested in product management, digital strategy, or entrepreneurship.

MIS Group 2BA Elective
BMIS 445 · 3 credits
Analytics Practicum
Spring

A capstone-style applied experience in which students complete a substantive analytics project from data collection through final recommendation. Working individually or in small teams, students demonstrate competency across the full analytics workflow — scoping, cleaning, modeling, visualizing, and presenting results. Projects may be sourced from industry partners, faculty research, or student-proposed problems.

MIS Group 2BA Elective
BMIS 447 · 3 credits
Applied AI in Business
TBD

Rather than treating artificial intelligence as an abstract concept, this course puts students in direct contact with the tools, workflows, and decision frameworks reshaping professional practice. Industry practitioners co-teach modules from their own domains — accounting, finance, marketing, operations, HR, and law, among others. Faculty provide the analytical framework; practitioners bring real-world implementation experience.

NewMIS Group 1
BMIS 489 · 3 credits
Special Topics in MIS
Spring

A rotating special topics course designed to respond to emerging trends, unique opportunities, or industry partnerships that fall outside the standard curriculum. Topics vary by semester and may focus on areas such as cybersecurity, emerging platforms, AI applications, or specialized industry contexts. Check the current semester's topic before enrolling. May be repeated for credit when the topic differs.

MIS Group 1
Three New Courses Launching with the Redesign
Two new core courses replace legacy requirements; one is entirely new to the MIS discipline.
BMIS 301 · NEW

Systems Analysis and Design with Programming Techniques

How organizations translate business needs into technology solutions — with a foundation in programming and systems thinking built for business students.

Systems Analysis & Design

  • Phases of systems development
  • Requirements gathering & process modeling
  • Technology deployment and feasibility analysis

Programming Fundamentals

  • Problem-solving strategies and logic
  • Functions, classes, and object-oriented design
Replaces: BMIS 331 (Problem Solving & Programming Techniques)
BMIS 302 · NEW

Database Management and Architecture

Database development, SQL, and the applied analytics tools that connect data infrastructure to real business insight.

Database Development & Management

  • Data models, types, and relational structures
  • SQL queries and database administration
  • Database security and governance

Applied Tools

  • Power BI dashboards and data visualization
  • ETL processes and workflow automation
  • Data ethics and responsible analytics
Replaces: BMIS 441 (Database Management)
Entirely New to the MIS Discipline

BMIS 447 — Applied AI in Business

Rather than treating AI as an abstract concept, this course puts students in direct contact with the tools, workflows, and decision frameworks reshaping professional practice. Industry professionals co-teach modules from their own domains.

Faculty provide the analytical framework and synthesis. Practitioners bring real-world implementation experience. Students graduate knowing how AI is actually being used — not just what it is.

AccountingFinanceMarketing OperationsHRLaw+ more
Learning Outcomes
  • Explain foundational AI concepts and identify how tools are deployed across business functions
  • Evaluate AI tools and workflows for suitability in specific business contexts
  • Apply AI-driven tools and techniques across multiple business domains
  • Identify opportunities where AI could improve processes, decisions, or outcomes
  • Assess the ethical, organizational, and strategic implications of AI implementation
  • Communicate AI-driven recommendations clearly to both technical and non-technical audiences
When Courses Are Offered
Plan your course sequence using semester availability below. Courses offered every semester provide maximum flexibility; courses offered once per year require planning ahead.
Fall Semester
BMIS 301
Systems Analysis & Design with Programming
NEW
BMIS 302
Database Management and Architecture
NEW
BMIS 342
Business Analytics
BMIS 443
Tech for Mobile/Web Business
Spring Semester
BMIS 301
Systems Analysis & Design with Programming
NEW
BMIS 302
Database Management and Architecture
NEW
BMIS 443
Tech for Mobile/Web Business
BMIS 445
Analytics Practicum
BMIS 489
Special Topics in MIS
📅
BMIS 447 — Applied AI in Business
Semester offering is to be determined. Check with the MIS discipline or current course schedule for the latest information.
Quick Reference
A summary of all structural changes to support advising conversations, degree audit updates, and registrar programming. Total credits are unchanged across all programs.

MIS Concentration — 12 Credits

  • Required (6 cr): BMIS 301 + BMIS 302
  • Group 1 (min 3 cr): BMIS 447 OR BMIS 489 — choose one
  • Group 2 (max 3 cr): BMIS 443, BMIS 445, BFIN 324, ACCT 311, or MKTG 421
  • Total credits unchanged from legacy

Business Analytics Concentration — 15 Credits

  • Required (6 cr): BMIS 301 + BMIS 302
  • Required (6 cr): BMIS 342 + ECON 355
  • Elective (3 cr): BMIS 443, BMIS 445, BFIN 324, ACCT 311, or MKTG 421
  • Total credits unchanged from legacy

MIS Minor — 17 Credits

  • Required (11 cr): BUSN 111 + BMIS 235 + BMIS 301 + BMIS 302
  • Group 1 (min 3 cr): BMIS 447 or BMIS 489
  • Group 2 (max 3 cr): BMIS 443, BMIS 445, or discipline elective
  • Total credits unchanged from legacy

Double Concentration — MIS + BA

  • Requires at least 9 unique credits across concentrations
  • BMIS 301 double-counts for both
  • BMIS 302 can be replaced in MIS path by BMIS 447 or BMIS 489
  • Sample: BMIS 301, 302, 342, ECON 355, 445 (BA) + 447, 489, 443 (MIS unique)
Questions?

Contact the MIS discipline through the School of Business Administration. Questions about specific student situations — equivalencies, substitutions, or degree audit updates — should be directed to the registrar's office.