- Construction management programs cover planning, budgeting, scheduling, contracts, safety, and team leadership.
- The curriculum blends engineering fundamentals with business management, preparing graduates to work across all phases of a project.
- At Everglades University, the program is structured for working adults and available fully online or on campus at multiple Florida locations.
- Graduates are prepared to pursue roles such as construction manager, project manager, estimator, and field superintendent.
- EU's curriculum includes LEED certification standards and sustainable construction methods as part of core coursework.
A construction management program is designed to equip students with the knowledge needed to run building projects from the first cost estimate to the final inspection. You study planning, budgeting, scheduling, safety, contracts, and team leadership.
The coursework blends engineering fundamentals with business management. Graduates develop the skills needed to contribute to construction projects and coordinate across trades. It is not an architecture degree, and it is not a civil engineering degree. Construction management sits between the two, covering enough technical depth to communicate with architects and engineers, and enough business acumen to keep a project on schedule and within budget.
What You Will Study
The curriculum is built around several core areas. Each one maps directly to something you’ll use on an actual project — not eventually, but in the first year. Employers hiring for field engineer, estimator, and project coordinator roles consistently cite these as the foundational gaps they see in candidates who came up through the trades without formal training.
Project Planning and Scheduling
Breaking a project into phases, setting timelines, and managing dependencies using Gantt charts, critical path method, and industry scheduling software.
Cost Estimation and Budgeting
Estimating materials, labor, and equipment costs, then managing a budget through change orders, contingencies, and real-world overruns.
Construction Methods and Materials
How structures are built, from concrete and steel to sustainable materials, along with the technical vocabulary to work with architects and trade contractors.
Contract Law and Risk Management
Reading and negotiating contracts between owners, general contractors, and subcontractors. Managing liability and the legal framework of commercial builds.
Safety and Building Codes
OSHA regulations, local building codes, and jobsite safety protocols. Keeping workers safe and projects compliant with applicable standards.
Surveying and Geospatial Technology
GPS, GIS, and surveying tools to support site planning, layout, and real-world project execution. Students learn to measure, map, and analyze land for construction projects.
Construction managers coordinate people, budgets, timelines, and risk. The degree reflects that range.
What a Typical Semester Looks Like
At Everglades University, the Bachelor of Science Degree with a major in Construction Management is structured so working adults can make progress without putting their career on hold. A typical semester includes three to four courses running concurrently, mixing technical and management coursework.
One semester could pair a scheduling and controls course with a construction materials class, alongside a business elective like organizational leadership. The balance keeps the workload manageable while building both sides of the skill set at the same time.
Courses are available online and on campus at multiple Florida locations. The schedule is designed around students who are working full-time. Program length varies based on enrollment pace, transfer credits, and individual scheduling.
Interested in the program structure? Speak with an EU admissions advisor.
Request informationWhat Makes Everglades University Different
Designed for working adults
The class schedule, delivery format, and advising structure are all built for students who are already in the workforce, many of them in the construction industry. That means evening and online options, smaller class sizes, and faculty with direct industry experience.
Sustainability is part of the core curriculum
Students study LEED certification standards, sustainable construction methods and materials, and energy-efficient design as part of required coursework. As the construction industry moves toward more sustainable building practices, this prepares graduates to work in a growing segment of the field.
Multiple Florida locations
In addition to the online format, EU has campuses in Boca Raton, Orlando, Tampa, Miami, and Sarasota. Students can attend in person, online, or a combination depending on what fits their schedule.
Pathways to graduate-level leadership
Everglades University offers graduate options for students who want to move beyond project execution into leadership and strategic roles. The Master’s Degree in Construction Management builds on core industry knowledge with a deeper focus on project oversight, risk management, and operational efficiency. For those looking to combine construction expertise with broader business leadership, the MBA with a Concentration in Construction Management integrates finance, management, and decision-making with industry-specific applications.
Where a Construction Management Degree Can Lead
Graduates of construction management programs move into roles across the industry, from commercial real estate to infrastructure and government projects. Common career paths include:
- Construction Manager / Project Manager: Overseeing projects from groundbreaking to certificate of occupancy
- Estimator: Preparing cost estimates for bids on new projects
- Field Superintendent: Managing day-to-day operations on the jobsite
- Owner’s Representative: Representing the project owner’s interests during construction
- Sustainability Consultant: Advising on green building standards and certification
South Florida has a strong and active construction market, with commercial, residential, and infrastructure projects creating ongoing demand for qualified managers. Explore the Construction Management programs at Everglades University.
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Learn more about the Construction Management program at Everglades University.
Request informationFrequently asked questions
What subjects are taught in a construction management program?
Construction management programs cover project planning, cost estimating, scheduling, contract administration, OSHA safety standards, and building technology. Students also develop leadership and communication skills essential for managing teams on active job sites.
Is construction management school hard?
Construction management programs are rigorous but designed for students who enjoy problem-solving and applied learning. Coursework combines technical knowledge, including cost estimation and structural systems, with management skills like scheduling and communication.
How long does a construction management degree take?
A Bachelor of Science Degree in Construction Management typically takes four years of full-time study. At Everglades University, the program is structured for working adults and can be completed in approximately 40 months.
Can I study construction management online?
Yes. Everglades University offers the Bachelor of Science Degree with a major in Construction Management fully online, as well as on campus at locations across Florida including Boca Raton, Miami, Orlando, Tampa, and Sarasota.
What Construction Management degrees does Everglades University offer?
Everglades University offers a Bachelor of Science Degree with a major in Construction Management, a Master's Degree in Construction Management, and a Master of Business Administration with a Concentration in Construction Management. These programs are available online or on campus at multiple Florida locations.
Is Everglades University accredited?
Everglades University is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC) to award bachelor's and master's degrees.
- Associated General Contractors of America. The Economic Impact of Construction in the United States and Florida. September 2025. agc.org