COLLEGE OF BUSINESS, ARTS & SCIENCES
Bachelor of Science in Entrepreneurship
                 ST 103
              AGRIBUSINESS
          1st Semester-A.Y. 2022-2023
                 Prepared by:
           RUTH E. PELIGRINO, MBA
                                    COURSE GUIDE
Course Description
     This course is designed to provide academic learning and experiences about agribusiness
and its impact in our economy. Topics will include barriers of agribusiness growth in the
country, world food supply, production and innovation of agribusiness products. Students will
also gain exposure in creation and innovation of their own agribusiness products in preparation
of their product presentation and exhibit.
       1. To engage students in financial learning, discovery, and innovative creativity in
          agribusiness sector.
       2. To enable students to develop their abilities to analyze, evaluate, and synthesize
          information in the agricultural industry and turning it into a business opportunity.
       3. To provide opportunities for students to engage in the discovery and understanding
          about agriculture business & entrepreneurship knowledge that are both thought
          provoking and relevant.
       4. To engage students in project-based learning relevant to the study and
          understanding of agribusiness.
Topic Outline
The course program consists of the following topics:
Part I Introduction to Agribusiness
       1. Agribusiness defined
       2. The Importance of Agribusiness in the economy
       3. Barriers of agribusiness growth in the present society
       4. Careers in Agribusiness
       5. Agricultural Commodities in the Philippines
       6. World Food Supply
Part II Production and Innovation of Agribusiness products
       8. The necessity of agribusiness managers to integrate rapidly changing technology in
       their operation
       9. Importance of Innovation in agribusiness in the present times
       7. Determining raw materials available in the community
       8. Identifying Opportunities of Agribusiness Products
               a. Food
               b, Non-Food Products
Part III Creation of Agribusiness Products
       9. Significance of the agribusiness food product in the local market
       10. Usability and functionality of the non-food product
       11. Product logo creation
       12. Business design and packaging designs
Part IV Product Exhibit
Course Requirements
For this course you will need to:
              Take written and/or online exams and quizzes
              Participate in physical and/or online discussion forum
              Submit online course works (problem solving sets, assignments, projects, etc.)
I encourage you to undertake these learning requirements/activities for you to fulfill the course
requirement. The passing percentage is 50% which is equivalent to 3.0.
The grading system is as follow:
          30% Major exams (Product Presentation as Midterm exam & Product Exhibit as Final
            Term exam)
       30% Quizzes, Oral Recitation, Special Course Works, etc. (Group Activities)
       40% Performance Tasks, Assignments, Research Works (Individual Activities)
       100%
Course Materials
This course consists of the following learning resources:
      EBook
      Video
      Course Guide
      Study Guide (Module Guide)
Other References
   Read
                 Bugador, Roderick. Industry Career Guide: Agribusiness
                    https://www.dlsu.edu.ph/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/2015-26.pdf..
                 The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World
                    https://www.fao.org/3/cc0639en/cc0639en.pdf
   Watch
                 h https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OLNrcC1YHbs
                 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h1SvJHruKwY
                 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJTNI215YP0
   Schedule of Tasks
     Time                                   Topic                                       Task
                                                                          Self-Introductions
    Week 1           Orientation Session                                  VGMO
                                                                          Levelling of Expectations
                                                                          Classroom Policies
                     Part I Introduction
 Week 2,3,4 &           a. What is agribusiness?                          Read Reference Notes
   Week 5               b. The Importance of Agribusiness in the          Watch video
                              economy                                     Individual Presentation of
  (Sept 19-30)          c. Barriers of agribusiness growth in the         Documentary and Powerpoint
                              Philippines                                 Presentation
                     Continuation                                         Read Reference Notes
Week 6 & 7 Week         a. Careers in Agribusiness                        Watch video
                        b. Agricultural Commodities in the                Individual Presentation of
  (Oct. 3-14).              Philippines                                   Documentary and Powerpoint
                        c. World Food Supply                              Presentation
                     Part II Production and Innovation of Agribusiness
  Week 8 & 9         products                                             Read Reference Notes
                        a. The necessity of agribusiness managers to      Watch video
  (Nov. 1-30)                integrate rapidly changing technology in     Quizzes
                             their operation                              Video/Documentary Form
                        b. Importance of Innovation in agribusiness in
                             the present times                            Group presentation
                        c. Determining raw materials available in the
                            community
     Week 10         Midterm Examination (Product Presentation)
    (Dec. 5-9)
                     Part III Creation of Agribusiness Products (Class    Collaboration      with      the
                     Presentation per Group)                              students of Bachelor of
 Week 11 & 17          a. Significance of the agribusiness food product   Science in Industrial Design
                     in the local market                                  Group presentation
                       b. Usability and functionality of the non-food
                     product
                       c. Product logo creation
                       d. Business design and packaging designs
     Week 18
(Jan. 11-13, 2023)                        Final Term Examination (Product Exhibit)
   House Rules
   1. Please be guided by netiquette rules (see http://www.albion.com/netiquette/corerules.html)
   when                participating               in            online             discussions.
    
   2. Expectation from Students:
          The students’ responsibility is to come to each class prepared. They are also expected to
   all examinations on the date scheduled. They should read the assigned problems prior to class.
   They are expected to attend each class and participate actively in the discussions.
   3. Academic Dishonesty:
          All BISU students are expected to be academically honest. Cheating, lying and other
   forms of immoral and unethical behavior will not be tolerated. Any student found guilty of
   cheating in examinations or plagiarism in submitted course requirements will (at the minimum)
   receive a 5.0 or failure in the course requirement or in the course. 
          Plagiarism or cheating refer to the use of authorized books, notes or otherwise securing
   help in test; copying tests, assignments, reports or term papers; representing the work of
   another person as one’s own; collaborating without authority, with another student during an
   examination or in preparing academic work; signing another student’s name on attendance
   sheet; or otherwise practicing scholastic dishonesty.
4. Policy on Absences:
       The allowed number of absences for 1st/2nd/3rd/4th year students enrolled in a 3-hour
per week class is 5 consecutive or non-consecutive absences. Request for excused absences or
waiver of absences must be presented upon reporting back to class.
        Special examinations will be allowed only in special cases, such as prolonged illness. It is
the responsibility of the student to monitor his/her own tardy incidents and absences that
might accumulate leading to a grade of “FA” failure due to absences. It is also his/her
responsibility to consult with the teacher, chair or dean should his/her case be of special
nature.
5. Rubric in Rating the Students Group Output
                   RUBRIC IN RATING THE STUDENTS PROJECTS/OUTPUTS LEVELS
PROJECTS/OUTPUTS                                  Indicators                               Points
     LEVELS                                                                                 (50 )
    Exemplary            Work/project is exceptional and impressive. A distinctive           50
                         sophisticated application of knowledge and skills are
                         evident
        Strong           Work/project exceeds the standard, thorough and                     40
                         effective application of knowledge and skills are evident
      Proficient         Work/project meets the standard acceptable and it                   30
                         displays the application of essential knowledge and skills
     Developing          Work/project does not yet meet the standard show basic              20
                         but inconsistent application of knowledge and skills, work
                         needs further development
      Emerging           Work/project shows partial application of knowledge and             10
                         skills, lacks depth or incomplete and needs considerable
                         development errors and omissions are present
      Learning           No work presented                                                   0
                                                 Total
Course Instructor:
RUTH E. PELIGRINO, MBA
Chairperson, ENTREP. Dept.
NOTES:
The Bachelor of Science in Agribusiness Management and Entrepreneurship aims
to produce graduates
Who will be prime-movers of agribusiness in the Philippines;
Who will be socially and environmentally responsible agribusiness professionals;
and
Who are equipped with knowledge, skills and experiences to harness
opportunities and face challenges in the national and international agribusiness
arena.
Agribusiness management encompasses many aspects of the economy:
agricultural producers, businesses that provide supplies and services to the
producers, businesses that add value to agricultural products, and those that
facilitate the marketing of agricultural products to an ever- growing marketplace”.
This sector of the economy went through many changes and will continue to
evolve in the future. For this reason, there is a need for prospective managers to
be abreast with the developments in the agribusiness and related sectors.
Graduates must be able to cope well with the dynamic nature of agribusiness.
BSABME will combine management/ business courses with technical courses with
emphasis on the uniqueness of agribusiness. Students will be trained on decision-
making given managerial challenges.
In recent years, entrepreneurship in agribusiness has become an emerging area in
agribusiness education. Through agribusiness entrepreneurship, the development
of micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), the growth drivers of the
Philippine agribusiness sector, can be promoted. Entrepreneurship is a mindset
anchored on innovation. Entrepreneurship education can help build an
entrepreneurship- driven economy by making individuals acquire entrepreneurial
mindsets, knowledge and skills. The institution of Agribusiness Entrepreneurship
as a track in the BSABME program shall help address the need for more
entrepreneurs and entrepreneurial-minded people in the country.