Young‚ Wiecek‚ McConomy Intermediate Accounting‚ Tenth Canadian Edition CHAPTER 2 CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK UNDERLYING FINANCIAL REPORTING ASSIGNMENT CLASSIFICATION TABLE Topic Brief Exercise Usefulness of the Conceptual Framework (CF) and main components of CF Exercise Problem 5‚ 7 Writing assignments 1 Qualitative Characteristics 1‚2‚3‚9 1‚5‚6‚7 2‚3‚4‚5‚7‚8 3‚5 Elements 4‚5‚6‚7 2‚7 2‚3‚5‚8 3 Foundational Principles 1‚2‚3‚5
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The Accounting Process (Textbook Libby et al. Chapters 1 and 2). Objectives: When you have successfully completed this lesson‚ you will be able to... Define accounting and explain its purpose Define business and identify the different types of businesses Explain the accounting equation: Assets = Liabilities + Owner’s Equity Visualize the start of a business‚ create accounting transactions for it‚ and prepare simple financial statements Reading Assignment Please read chapters 1 and
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CHAPTER 1 THE CHANGING ROLE OF MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING IN A DYNAMIC BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT Learning Objectives 1. Define managerial accounting and describe its role in the management process. 2. Explain four fundamental management processes that help organizations attain their goals. 3. List and describe five objectives of managerial accounting activity. 4. Explain the major differences between managerial and financial accounting. 5. Explain where managerial accountants are located
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CHAPTER 15 Multiple-Choice Questions 1. easy A sample in which the characteristics of the sample are the same as those of the population is a(n): b a. variables sample. b. representative sample. c. attributes sample. d. random sample. 2. easy When the auditor decides to select less than 100 percent of the population for testing‚ the auditor is said to use: a a. audit sampling. b. representative sampling. c. poor judgment. d. none of the above. 3. In practice‚ auditors
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Chapter 5 The Expenditure Cycle Part 1: Purchases and Cash Disbursements Procedures Accounting Information Systems‚ 5th edition James A. Hall COPYRIGHT © 2007 Thomson South-Western‚ a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson‚ the Star logo‚ and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license Objectives for Chapter 5 • Tasks performed during purchases and cash disbursement processes • Departments involved in purchases and cash disbursement activities and the flow of these transactions
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CHAPTER 9 INVENTORY COSTING AND CAPACITY ANALYSIS 9-1 No. Differences in operating income between variable costing and absorption costing are due to accounting for fixed manufacturing costs. Under variable costing only variable manufacturing costs are included as inventoriable costs. Under absorption costing both variable and fixed manufacturing costs are included as inventoriable costs. Fixed marketing and distribution costs are not accounted for differently under variable costing and absorption
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Chapter 1: The plot begins with a utopian society of sorts that exemplifies perfection and every living thing existing in agreement. Flourishing ranches encompassed the town described by Rachel Carson and phenomenal vegetation. The Spring in this town was an absolute beauty. A drastic change suddenly overcomes the image and poisons the life. People and animals begin to become sick as a result of environmental destruction from toxins. Chapter 2: The trend of humans harming their environment has
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Chapter 1 Data and Statistics Learning Objectives 1. Obtain an appreciation for the breadth of statistical applications in business and economics. 2. Understand the meaning of the terms elements‚ variables‚ and observations as they are used in statistics. 3. Obtain an understanding of the difference between categorical
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Textbook case: Managerial Accounting for Managers‚ 2nd edition Noreen‚ Brewer and Garrison (McGraw-Hill/Irwin‚ 2008). Case 4-33 Cost Structure; Target profit and Break-Even Analysis Contribution Income Statement for all three scenarios: 15% commission 20% commission Own sales force Sales $16‚000‚000 $16‚000‚000 $16‚000‚000 Variable manuf. cost $7‚200‚000 $7‚200‚000 $7‚200‚000 Commissions $2‚400‚000 $3‚200‚000 $1‚200‚000 -Tot. variable cost ($9‚600‚000)
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Birzeit University MBA Program Managerial Accounting BUSA 631 Spring 2013 Case 3 The Rohr Company’s old equipment for making subassemblies is worn out. The company is considering two courses of action: (a) Completely replacing the old equipment with new equipment or (b) Buying subassemblies from a reliable outside supplier‚ who has quoted a unit price of $1 on a 7-year contract for a minimum of 50‚000 units per year. Production was 60‚000 units in each of the past 2 years. Future
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