Accounting for the Future : More Than Numbers. A Collaborative Investigation into the Changing Skill Set for Professional Accounting Graduates Over the Next Ten Years and Strategies for Embedding Such Skills into Professional Accounting Programs : Volume 1 : Final Report.
Final report from a collaborative investigation into the changing skill set deemed necessary for professional accounting graduates over the next 10 years and strategies for embedding such skills into professional accounting programs. The project aimed to identify whether there is a consensus as to t...
| Institutions: | University of Western Australia University of Adelaide University of Southern Queensland Charles Sturt University Swinburne University of Technology University of Western Australia |
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| Hlavní autoři: | , , , , , |
| Vydáno: |
Australian Learning and Teaching Council (ALTC)
2009
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| Témata: | |
| On-line přístup: | /resources/DS7-619%20Accounting%20for%20the%20future.%20Final%20report%202009.%20Volume%201.pdf |
| Shrnutí: | Final report from a collaborative investigation into the changing skill set deemed necessary for professional accounting graduates over the next 10 years and strategies for embedding such skills into professional accounting programs. The project aimed to identify whether there is a consensus as to the key technical and non-technical skills for graduates of professional accounting programs to: meet the challenges of the profession; identify the range of non-technical skills required of professional accountants; identify examples of best practice for embedding relevant non-technical skills in professional accounting programs; and disseminate findings to stakeholders and accounting academics for use in accounting programs. Common themes that emerged were that the technical skills required of graduates were essentially basic accounting skills. Non-technical graduate skills were also deemed very important, particularly by employers in large organisations; with communication, teamwork, and self-management regarded as the most desirable. Graduates' skills deemed by stakeholders to be the most inadequate were communication and problem solving. |
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| ISBN: | 9780646251691 9780646251691 |