Advances in Accounting Education: Teaching and Curriculum Innovations Vol: 23

Thomas G. Calderon
University of Akron, USA


Product Details
Format:
Hardback
ISBN:
9781789733945
Published:
Publisher:
Emerald Publishing Limited
Dimensions:
216 pages - 152 x 229mm
Series:
Advances in Accounting Education: Teaching and Curriculum Innovations
List price £77.99 List price €94.99 List price $111.99
Categories:
Advances in Accounting Education is a refereed, academic research publication whose purpose is to help meet the needs of faculty members and administrators who are interested in ways to improve teaching, learning and curriculum development in the accounting area at the college and university level. We publish thoughtful, well-developed articles that are readable, relevant, and reliable. Articles may be either empirical or non-empirical and should emphasize innovative approaches that inform faculty and administrators as they seek to improve their classrooms, curricula and programs. 
Volume 23 consists of three themes: (1) Capacity Building and Program Leadership, (2) Classroom Innovation and Pedagogy, and (3) Engagement with Professionals Through Advisory Councils. 
Theme 1, Capacity Building and Program Leadership, include articles that focus on innovation in accounting doctoral programs, roles and professional development opportunities of accounting program leaders, the interaction of gender and performance shortly after junior college students transfer to a four-year college, and the diffusion of data analytics in the accounting curriculum. 
Theme 2, Classroom Innovation and Pedagogy, consists of a class exercise on accounting for stock option modifications and option service and performance conditions, student group work across geographical and cultural borders, and the use of publicized-data breach cases to incorporate cybersecurity into upper-level accounting courses.
Theme 3, Engagement with Professionals Through Advisory Councils, explores ways in which accounting programs might leverage their advisory councils (boards) to improve their curricula and strengthen opportunities for student success. The first article in Theme 3 reports the result of a survey that explores opportunities for interaction between the accounting academy and the profession through advisory councils. This is followed by articles that discuss the use of advisory councils to (a) improve the master's in accountancy curriculum and (b) serve as a catalyst for improving the ethical reasoning skills of accounting students and accounting professionals. 
In total, this volume includes 10 peer reviewed articles that make significant contributions to teaching, learning, curricula and programs, and faculty development matters in accounting.

THEME 1: CAPACITY BUILDING AND PROGRAM LEADERSHIP 
1. Enhancing the Benefits of Accounting Doctoral Consortia; Anne L. Christensen, Ph.D., and Shelley C. Rhoades-Catanach, Ph.D. 
2. Accounting Department Head: The Road Less Traveled; Thomas G. Noland, Ph.D., CPA, CMA, CDFM, Shawn Mauldin, Ph.D., CPA, CMA, CFP, and Robert L. Braun, Ph.D., CIA 
3. Gender on Performance in Accounting Courses During and After Shock Periods; Hossein Nouri, Ph.D., CPA, CFE, CFSA, and Maria S. Domingo, LLM 
4. Data Analytics in the Accounting Curriculum; Vernon J. Richardson, Ph.D. and Yuxin Shan
THEME 2: CLASSROOM INNOVATION AND PEDAGOGY 
5. A Class Exercise: Accounting for Stock Option Modifications and Option Service and Performance Conditions; Natalie Tatiana Churyk, Ph.D., CPA, Shaokun (Carol) Yu, Ph.D., CPA, and Brian Rick, CPA  
6. Student Group Work Across Borders: A Teaching Innovation and Exploratory Study; Kim Key, Ph.D. and Emer Mulligan, Ph.D. 
7. Using Ten Teaching Modules and Recently Publicized Data-Breach Cases to Integrate Cybersecurity into Upper-Level Accounting Courses; Saeed J. Roohani, Ph.D. and Xiaochuan Zheng, Ph.D. 
THEME 3: ENGAGEMENT WITH PROFESSIONALS THROUGH ADVISORY COUNCILS 
8. Accounting Advisory Councils: Engagement Between Practice and Academe; Carolyn Strand Norman, Ph.D., CPA, and Nancy A. Bagranoff, DBA, CPA 
9. On the Use of Advisory Board Input for Revising Master of Accountancy Curriculum; Kenneth Snead, Ph.D., Fred Coleman, Ph.D., CPA, and Earl McKinney, Ph.D. 
10. Using Accounting Department Advisory Councils and Higher Quality Continuing Education Requirements to Improve the Accounting Profession's Ethical Reasoning Skills; Alan Reinstein, DBA, CPA, Natalie Tatiana Churyk, Ph.D., CPA, Eileen Z. Taylor, Ph.D., CPA, CFE, and Paul F. Williams, Ph.D.
Thomas G. Calderon is Professor of Accounting and Chair of the George W. Daverio School of Accountancy at The University of Akron. He has served as Chair since 2005 and recently completed a two-year term (2014 - 2016) as Chair of The University of Akron’s caucus of department chairs and school directors.

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