Professional Standards Web standards promote higher accessibility and usability; it suggests a set of rules in which every developer can follow and understand (Boudreau‚ 2002). Standards set by W3C‚ World Wide Web Consortium‚ will ensure that most browsers used will present the website as it was intended to be‚ without time consuming rewrites of code for specific browsers (W3schools‚ 2013). Accessibility is very important as it allows the web to be used by individuals with disabilities but
Premium World Wide Web Web page Web browser
Jennifer Ford PTLLS Chapter 1 Professional Standards for Teaching There are six domains that make up the professional standard for teaching in the lifelong learning sector: • • • • • • Domain A: Values and Practice Domain B: Learning and Teaching Domain C: Specialist Learning and Teaching Domain D: Planning for Learning Domain E: Assessment for Learning Domain F: Access and Progress Each are divided into three sections: • • • Scope Knowledge and Understanding Practice Scope outlines
Premium Knowledge Educational psychology Learning
Generally Accepted Auditing Standards Paper University of Phoenix ACC 490 Auditing February 7‚ 2011 Generally Accepted Auditing Standards Paper Every auditor is expected to follow the standards of the industry while conducting audits for clients. The most widely used standards were originally established in the 1940s and were adopted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board PCAOB in 2003 and are referred to as the Generally Accepted Auditing Standards GAAS (Boynton & Johnson‚ 2006)
Premium Audit Auditing Financial audit
1. The Enron debacle created what one public official reported was a “crisis of confidence” on the part of the public in the accounting profession. List the parties who you believe are most responsible for that crisis. Briefly justify each of your choices. Following parties are believed to be the most responsible for the crisis. With any big organization going so bad‚ the blame starts with the top level executives‚ there was no different in this case. For Enron the blame started with Enron’s
Premium Audit Enron Financial audit
Accounting Importance of Generally Accepted Auditing Standards (GAAS) Miriam Manjarres November 18‚ 2012 Abstract The Generally Accepted Auditing Standards are standards that were developed through the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants as a foundation in conducting an audit in its reasonable accuracy. There is a need for auditors to follow the standards provided to be able to render a report of the financial statements audited stating that it is free from any misstatement
Premium Auditing Audit Auditor's report
The Enron Collapse By: Jeff Porter Kevin Clark Jared Sabelhaus February 18‚ 2005 Introduction Companies have mission statements that often read like inspirational leaflets. Enron’s mission was at first to be the world’s greatest energy company then later revised in early 2001 to be the “world’s greatest company”. In the late 1990’s‚ Enron seemed to have accomplished their mission accumulating vast amounts of assets‚ had the intellectually elite at the helm‚ a political climate in their
Premium Enron Enron scandal
The board should set the company’s values and standards and ensure that its obligations to shareholders and others are understood and met. But the primary responsibility of the board of directors is to protect the shareholders’ assets and ensure they receive a decent return on their investment. b. The board of directors definitely could have prevented the fall of Enron. First of all‚ if the board of directors made the right strategies for Enron rather than created hundreds of SPEs to remove assets
Premium Auditing Audit Auditor's report
directors he was able to misled the investor which bring about Enron filing for bankruptcy in 2001. In early‚ 2002 criminal investigation was open by US department of Justice into Enron’s collapse. The Security exchange commission (SEC) also opened the investigation into Arthur Andersen as well because they destroy and hide evidence of Enron’s financial statement. The role of the auditing giant Arthur Andersen in the collapse of Enron is incomprehensible to some. The accounting firm overlooked significant
Premium Enron Enron scandal Arthur Andersen
Enron a Case Study Enron‚ once known as the worldwide leader in energy trading‚ began as a natural gas pipeline company. “At its peak‚ Enron brokered up to 20 percent of America’s energy transactions. These included basic contracts to deliver natural gas from wells to pipelines for distribution to homes‚ contracts for the purchase of electrical power facility out port‚ and more complex financial contracts‚ which allowed power companies to manage price and market risk” (Ackman)
Premium Psychology Management Strategic management
Case 9 Enron: Questionable Accounting Leads to Collapse How did the corporate culture of Enron contribute to its bankruptcy? The corporate culture at Enron was centered on a twisted lack of ethical behavior based on greed and profit seeking. Top management set a tone in the workplace that encouraged risk and rule breaking in the name of revenue. Employees were compensated for unethical behavior that brought money into the company and terminated if they did not reach the monetary levels of
Premium Enron