I hope you're going for Business Management and not Avia. Management - because I can tell you that degree is pretty much worthless.
And I'm a SIU avia/flight alum and thats speaking from experience.
The Aviation Management degree is intended to be an add-on to the the flight courses. It's not worthless when it gets you a job flying.
If your goal isn't to fly or you would like a backup, choose something else. But my advise, and what I myself am doing, is to do the AVM degree along with the flight courses
Interesting points, I'll offer a counter point. (From SIUC)
I was a triple Major (Flight / Maintenance / Management) at one point. Flight because I wanted it, Maintenance because I had the A side of the A&P and it would be an easy add on and Management because it was a Bachelor of Science Degree with the others being AS and AA.
I picked up a Co-Op program at the end of my second semester with then McDonnell-Douglas partly from my Navy Experience, partly from association with the maintenance degree I was pursuing. I spent two semesters working at MDC and got a job offer. Seeing what the pilot side was getting for offers at the time ($14K to $20K if they were lucky and not CFI'ing for eternity), I thought $42k was a better path (this is mid 90's). I dropped the two AA majors and poured on the credit hours to graduate early (2.5 years total).
That job worked out great, and I spent 15 years working for McDonnell-Douglas and Boeing after the merger. Worked my way through Product Support (ILS) and Program Management ranks and was in six figures for my last seven years of employment there. I left last fall for a sweet offer from GE Aviation that also led to a better offer for my wife (at the same company).....(yes she makes more than me, but not much).
What degree do I have? BS in Aviation Management from SIUC
What degree does my wife have? EE from Cal State Long Beach, Bio Med Engineering from Cal State Long Beach, MBA from Pepperdine, Masters in Communication from Gonzaga and a Juris Doctorate from Loyola Law School
We both make well over six figures and though she makes more, its less than $15k more.
Don't listen to the "Aviation Management Degrees are worthless" crowd. Its all in what you make of it and how you network and present yourself. When I hire, I barely look at what degree anyone has.