FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING II COURSE OUTLINE SEMESTER II‚ 2012 – 2013 Lecturer: Mrs. Diana Weekes-Marshall BSc‚ FCCA‚ FCA diana.weekes-marshall@cavehill.uwi.edu Room SSA5 Tel: 417-4872 (office) Office Hours: By appointment only COURSE AIMS This course builds on the foundation established in the Level I Financial Accounting courses and the Level II Intermediate Accounting course‚ ACCT 2014 Financial Accounting I. Financial Accounting II follows
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APUSH American Pageant 14th edition Chapter 34 Notes (21 terms) 1. London economic conference (1933): a 16 nation economic conference organized to stabilize international currency rates. Franklin Roosevelt’s decision to revoke American participation contributed to a deepening world economic crisis. 2. Good neighbor policy: a departure from the Roosevelt corollary to the Monroe doctrine‚ the good neighbor policy stressed nonintervention in Latin America. It was begun by Herbert Hoover but associated
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CHAPTER 2 SOLUTIONS TO B EXERCISES EXERCISE 2-1B (15–20 minutes) (a) True. (b) False – General-purpose financial reports helps users who lack the ability to demand all the financial information they need from an entity and therefore must rely‚ at least partly‚ on the information in financial reports. (c) False – Standard-setting that is based on personal conceptual frameworks will lead to different conclusions about identical or similar issues. As a result‚ standards will not be consistent
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Lamarsh Solutions Chapter-2 2.5 This is a question of probability‚ For molecules which have an approximate weight of 2‚ there are two 1H and we can find the probability or the percentage over 1 as‚ 0.99985*0.99985=0.99970 The same calculation can be made for the mol. weights of 3 and 4 For 3 there are one 1H and one 2 H and so‚ 0.99985*0.00015=1.49e-4 For 4 there are two 2 H and so‚ 0.00015*0.00015=2.25e-8 2.7 From table of nuclides we can find the atomic weights of O and H using the abundances
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SYLLABUS FOR MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING – ACCT 5100/7100 PROFESSOR LINDA BAMBER Fall 2012 Date 8/14 Tue. Topic Introduction to Management Accounting and Professionalism Chapter and Reading Course Outline Syllabus eLC Student Orientation: http://elc.uga.edu/student_orientation /index.html Assignment Due Today 1) Hand in your ACCT 5100/7100 profile. 2) Form teams of four with no more than one MBA student per team (I will try to fill out teams of two or three). One team member should email
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L-S‚ T & H‚ Chapter 4: RQ4.1‚ RQ4.3‚ RQ4.5‚ RQ4.7‚ RQ4.8‚ RQ4.9‚ RQ4.10‚ RQ4.11‚ RQ4.14‚ RQ4.15‚ RQ4.18‚ RQ4.20 E4.21‚ E4.25‚ E4.26‚ P4.33‚ P4.36‚ P4.37 and P4.40. RQ4. 1 Identify the major purposes of product costing. For each purpose discuss whether information about current or future product costs is required. What implication does your answer have for developing a product costing system? L-S‚ T & H‚ page 131. Purpose Current / Future Product Costs Short-term decisions: product mix‚ pricing
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CHAPTER 12 STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS SUMMARY OF QUESTIONS BY OBJECTIVES AND BLOOM’S TAXONOMY |Item | |1. | |42.
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CONFIRMING PAGES Chapter 2 Learning Objectives After studying Chapter 2‚ you should be able to: LO1 Identify and give examples of each of the three basic manufacturing cost categories. LO2 Distinguish between product costs and period costs and give examples of each. including calculation of the cost of goods sold. LO4 Prepare a schedule of cost of goods manufactured. LO5 Understand the differences between variable costs and fixed costs. LO6 Understand the differences between
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Cost Accounting: A Managerial Emphasis‚ EXHIBIT 11-1 Accounting Information and the Decision Process FIVE-STEP SEQUENCE Step 1: Gathering Information AN ILLUSTRATION The current manufacturing line uses 20 employees‚ 15 operating machines‚ and 5 handling materials‚ for a total cost of $640‚000. The rearrangement of the manufacturing assembly line is expected to eliminate materials-handling costs‚ equivalent to $160‚000. The cost of the rearrangement will be $90‚000. Historical
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Assignment: Cost Accounting Applied By Professor Bryan Womack Course Title ACC 350012VA016-1122-001 Cost Accounting February 26‚ 2012 Companies that are successful financially know what their costs are and how those costs are being spent. The company I have chosen wants to change from a general accounting system where costs are put in general categories and they currently do not have any allocation
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