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Department of Accounting (ACC) Bryan School of Business & Economics 418 Bryan Building Accelerated Master's Program | Accounting Courses(ACC) | Accounting Major | Faculty Susan E. Anderson, Associate Professor and Head of Department Professors Arrington, Collins, Jones (Emeritus), Woelfel, (Emeritus); Associate Professors Cassill, Helms; Assistant Professors Biggart, Harden, Raedy; Lecturers Khanlarian, Leuck, Shepherd Mission Statement The mission of the Department of Accounting of the Joseph M. Bryan School of Business and Economics is (1) to provide high quality programs of education for accounting majors at the undergraduate and graduate levels, (2) to provide high quality courses to support the undergraduate and graduate programs offered by the Bryan School and the University at large, (3) to simulate and support productive, high quality research, scholarship, and publication, (4) to provide service, largely through committee representation to the University, the Bryan School, the Department, the Academic Accounting Community and the Accounting profession, and (5) to foster faculty interaction with the external community that serves the needs of the external community. The primary goal of the department is to provide programs of quality education in accounting at the undergraduate and graduate levels. The undergraduate program provides an excellent foundation for accounting careers in industry, government and other not-for-profit organizations; is sufficiently broad to qualify graduates for a wide range of entry-level, business-related positions; and prepares students for further graduate-level studies in areas such as accounting, law and business administration. (Also offered as an evening program.) Degree: Bachelor of Science Required: 122 semester hours, to include at least 36 hours at or above the 300 course level AOS Code: U301General Requirements
All-University Liberal Education Requirements (AULER) (45 hours)All students in this program must meet AULER requirements. Areas with specific requirements for this major are indicated below. See a detailed listing of the complete AULER area requirements and courses meeting those requirements. AULER Area/Required Courses Sem Hrs
Major and Related Area Requirements
ElectivesElectives sufficient to complete 122 semester hours required for degree. At least 10 hours of electives must be taken outside the Bryan School of Business and Economics.
RequirementsSix semester hours to consist of:
Qualifications
RecognitionThe designation "Honors in Accounting" will be printed on the student's official transcript. Interested students should see Accelerated Master's Programs for Undergraduates for details about the BS in Accounting/MS in Accounting program requirements. For Undergraduates 201 Financial Accounting (3:3).Pr. second semester freshman standing. Introduction to external financial statements of organizations, emphasizing the use of accounting information in making investment and other decisions. Addresses ethical considerations and role of financial reporting in society. 202 Managerial Accounting (3:3).Pr. second semester freshman standing. Introduction to internal accounting and reporting of organizations, emphasizing the use of accounting information used by management and other decision makers within the organization. 203 Double-Entry Formal Accounting Systems (1:1).Pr. grade of C or better in 201. Essential aspects of accounting cycle, including journalizing and posting transactions, making necessary adjustments, preparing financial statements and closing the books. 318 Intermediate Accounting I (3:3).Pr. admission to program or other approved program; grade of C or better in 201, 202 and 203; junior standing. Focuses on the conceptual framework underlying financial reporting by business enterprises, the processes by which authoritative accounting guidelines are promulgated, and the preparation, presentation, interpretation, and use of financial statements. 319 Intermediate Accounting II (3:3).Pr. admission to program or other approved program; grade of C or better in 201, 202, 203, and 318; junior standing. The second course in the two-course intermediate accounting sequence. Continues the examination of the preparation, presentation, interpretation, and use of financial statements. 325 Accounting Transaction Processing Systems (3:3).Pr. admission to program or other approved program; grade of C or better in 201, 202, 203, 318 and ISM 280; junior standing. Designed to provide an understanding of a variety of accounting subsystems, systems analysis, and design issues reinforced through case studies. 420 Federal Tax Concepts (3:3).Pr. admission to program or other approved program; grade of C or better in 201, 202, 203, and 318; senior standing. Tax structure and tax principles. Accounting principles and procedures related to tax accounting. Application of tax and accounting principles to specific problems. 430 Cost Accounting (3:3).Pr. admission to program or other approved program; grade of C or better in 201, 202, 203, and 318; senior standing. Costs and cost accounting principles, costing systems, cost determination procedures; control and analytical practices for managerial decision-making. 493 Honors Work (3-6).Pr. see Honors Program, XXX 493
499 Independent Research in Accounting (1 to 3).Pr. admission to program and with permission of Department; senior standing.
Individual study of an issue or problem(s) in accounting of particular interest to the student. Student must arrange time and course requirements with instructor prior to registration.
530 Comparative Cost Systems (3:3).Pr. grade of C of better in 430 or MBA 612, admission to Department or other professional program approved by the Department; senior or graduate standing. Principal topics are cost management systems for strategic planning, controlling, and decision-making; and product costing using concepts or resource consumption. Life cycle costing and world class accounting are emphasized. 540 Auditing Concepts (3:3).Pr. grade of C or better in 319 and 325, admission to the Department or other professional program approved by the Department; senior or graduate standing. Theory and practice of operational, compliance, and financial auditing; auditing standards and procedures, ethics, rules of evidence, transaction cycle controls. 542 Specialized Accounting Entities (3:3).Pr. grade of C or better in 319, admission to Department or other professional program approved by the Department; senior or graduate standing. Theory and practice associated with business combinations, consolidated financial statements, partnerships, branches, governmental units, nonprofit organizations, international operations, bankruptcy and other accounting topics related to specialized accounting entities. 589 Experimental Course: Business Law (3:3).Contract and sales law, professional ethics, securities and regulations and relevant laws governing negotiable instruments. Legal issues surrounding partnerships, corporations, and principal-agencies also presented. (Offered FA 99) Please refer to The Graduate School Bulletin for additional graduate level courses. |
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