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Graduate school is an option for accounting majors. Monmouth College graduates are
prepared to enter MBA or MS in Accounting programs with proper scheduling of classes in
consultation with their academic advisor. Illinois currently requires 150-semester hours
of education to sit for the CPA exam including a bachelor's degree in accounting. Some
students have elected to enter graduate school directly after graduation, others have elected
to enter the workforce and plan to enter graduate school later. In some cases, a
graduate's employer will pay for the cost of graduate school if the individual is willing to
work full-time and go to school part-time.
The department has developed articulation agreements with
several graduate programs which allow students to enter the graduate program immediately upon
graduation. These agreements require students to complete courses beyond the major
requirements. If this option is desired, early contact with an academic advisor in the
department is recommended to ensure meeting requirements of the graduate program the student
intends to matriculate.
As part of the department's assessment program, the Master
Field Test (MFT) in Business is administered to accounting seniors in the spring.
A
frequent statement in the business world is
that accounting is the language of business. A
successful business manager uses accounting
information to make decisions affecting the
future health of the firm. An accountant
serves many roles within a business to ensure
that information is useful and
valid. Accountants also serve to ensure that
investors, creditors, and government
regulators receive information that is a fair
depiction of an entity’s business activity.
The most
widely recognized credential in the accounting
profession is the CPA (certified public
accountant). A CPA is the only person allowed
to sign an audit opinion attesting to the
fairness of financial information. People who
receive a set of audited financial statements
put more faith in the information because a
third party has investigated and determined
that no material information has been
overlooked or presented in a misleading
manner. The public accounting profession is
experiencing a rebirth after recent scandals
and is working to rebuild itself after a few
individuals breached ethical standards.
Two other
credentials which have gained wide acceptance,
but are lesser known, are the CMA (certified
management accountant) and the CIA (certified
internal auditor). Both of these professional
designations assess a candidate’s skills and
abilities in areas which are valuable to an
organization. The CMA designation places
greater focus on management areas and internal
decision making skills than the CPA
designation. The CIA designation focuses on
the knowledge and abilities needed to evaluate
the internal management processes of an
organization and on how those processes can be
improved.
A credential
which is rapidly increasing in stature and
demand is the CFE (certified fraud
examiner). The CFE focuses on the knowledge
and skills necessary for an individual to
successfully investigate a potential fraud
situation. A related area is forensic
accounting. The forensic accountant is the
individual who provides assistance in
circumstances requiring reconstruction of
business and financial information. Examples
are providing help to legal counsel in
litigation or to a creditors’ committee in a
bankruptcy proceeding. Both of these fields
require extensive experience to build the
investigative skills required for success.
Studying
accounting in a liberal arts environment is an
excellent means of preparing for your
future. Combined with our general education
program, we will help you develop the
learning-to-learn skills, communication
skills, and foundational accounting knowledge
necessary for success in the changing
accounting landscape. This accounting
landscape is continually changing as managers
invent new ways of doing business and
researchers identify areas where accounting
policies/procedures can be
improved. Organizations value an individual’s
ability to seek new information and to
integrate that information into that
individual’s existing knowledge base. Our
accounting courses are structured to require
an understanding of accounting and business
issues and the rationale for the related
accounting pronouncements.
The
Accounting Education Change Commission in its
first pronouncement, identified
learning-to-learn as the most important skill
for success in the accounting profession. A
liberal arts environment is a perfect
complement to our accounting courses in
developing student skills. The original intent
of the 150-semester hour proposal by the
American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (for those desiring to sit for the
CPA exam) was to require students to take more
non-business courses as a means of developing
“well-rounded” professionals. In the
non-accounting courses, students develop
thinking skills in a non-business
context. Also further developed are oral and
written communication skills. Our students
then utilize these skills in successfully
completing the accounting courses we offer.
Individuals
earning an accounting major do not limit
themselves to accounting positions in the
future. Accounting provides a background which
is useful in a wide variety of business
fields. A national survey has reported that
approximately 40% of CEOs for U.S. companies
started their careers in accounting
positions. Monmouth College accounting
graduates have obtained positions in Big 4 CPA
firms; regional and local CPA firms; large
international businesses; national, regional,
and local businesses; banks; and government
agencies. These positions have been in
auditing, tax preparation and planning,
business consulting, finance, management, and
internal auditing.
Over the past
seven years, seniors in the accounting
capstone course have taken the Master Field
Test prepared by Educational Testing Services
(the same company that prepares the SAT). Over
that time frame, our students’ average score
has placed us in the top 20% nationally of the
business and accounting programs which
administer the exam. In Spring 2004 and 2006,
the average score placed the program in the
top 5% in the country.
In summary,
the study of accounting opens many
opportunities in the business world. The
Monmouth College Accounting program provides a
challenging, yet rewarding curriculum which
opens the door for future success.
Career Paths
Those future endeavors may include, but are not limited to:
- Graduate study
- Sitting for a professional examination: e.g., CPA, CMA,
CIA
- Employment with a large corporation, CPA firm, or public
entity
Accounting majors have the opportunity to pursue careers in a
variety of career fields and industries. Public Accounting (large and small firms),
private industry, and government all provide challenging opportunities for graduates. Many accountants who begin in industry move into management and become successful corporate
CEO's.
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