Accounting
Charles A. Dana Professor Michael Puddicombe; Associate Professor Thomas Yandow; Assistant Professor Alex Chung.
The accounting program focuses on the process of analyzing, recording, communicating, and interpreting financial information about economic entities for the purpose of external and internal reporting and decision making. Our students integrate knowledge from other disciplines within the school: management, economics and computer information systems, to enter into organizations with both a functional and enterprise perspective.
Goals:
Build a solid foundation of accounting concepts, skills, and practical applications to prepare yourself for a wide array of professional opportunities.
This major provides students with the ability to:
- Demonstrate fundamental accounting principles and procedures,
- Employ technology tools related to the area of accounting,
- Analyze alternatives to complex accounting problems,
- Utilize and integrate accounting information in business decision-making.
Outcomes:
- Able to prepare and interpret a set of general-purpose financial statements.
- Understand the external audit process including planning, risk assessment, evidence, audit procedures, and reporting, as well its inherent limitations, all within the context of ethical behavior and legal liability.
- Able to prepare a comprehensive and complex personal income tax return using appropriate software.
- Possess an integrated understanding of the other major areas of business: management, economics, finance, marketing, etc.
Careers for this Major:
Accountants are employed in a wide variety of positions in public practice, business, industry, not-for-profits (hospitals, colleges and universities, charitable organizations, and voluntary health and welfare entities), education, and governmental units from the federal to the local level.
Accountants employed by public accounting firms may be employed as:
- Auditors
- Tax preparers, consultants, and planners
- Management consultants
- Forensic accountants
Accountants in business, industry, not-for-profit may be employed as:
- Financial accountants
- Managerial and cost accountants
- Tax accountants
- Financial and budget analysts
- Internal and EDP auditors
Accountants in government may be employed as:
- Tax auditors
- Regulatory compliance auditors
- Regulatory and contract analysts
- Budget analysts
- Law enforcement officers in cases of fraud or other white collar crime
Professional Credentials:
Credentials are awarded based upon meeting specific educational, examination, and experiential requirements. Certified Public Accountants (CPA) are licensed by a state to provide accounting services to the public (see CPA requirements below). Accountants engaged in business, industry, or not-for-profit entities may obtain the Certified Management Accountant (CMA), Global Chartered, Management Accountant (CGMA), Certified Internal Auditor (CIA), or Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE) designations granted by professional associations for those fields.
CPA Requirements :
In addition to successfully completing the CPA examination, licensing requirements address specific educational, experiential, and/or residential requirements. See the requirements of the State Board of Accountancy or other licensing body for the correct state or the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (https://nasba.org/stateboards/).
Generally, students are required to have completed 150 credits to be qualified to sit for the CPA examination. State educational requirements may be general or highly specific as to the number and nature of courses and credits required in accounting and in other business or business related disciplines to meet that state’s particular educational requirement for the exam; some states may even address the method and locations of course delivery.
Although the completion of the requirements of the Norwich University accounting major, either singly or in combination with a double major in management, provides a solid foundation in preparation for the CPA examination, it may not fully meet a particular state’s requirements. In such cases, students are encouraged to complete graduate-level education in accounting, taxation, or business to fulfill necessary requirements.