In 2017 my Website was migrated to
the clouds and reduced in size.
Hence some links below are broken.
One thing to try if a “www” link is broken is to substitute “faculty” for “www”
For example a broken link
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Pictures.htm
can be changed to corrected link
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Pictures.htm
However in some cases files had to be removed to reduce the size of my Website
Contact me at rjensen@trinity.edu if
you really need to file that is missing
ACCT 5342 ACCOUNTING INFORMATION SYSTEMS -
FALL SEMESTER 2005
Last Updated September 20, 2005
Bob Jensen Retired on May 14, 2006.
This is no longer a current syllabus.
.
Trinity University Accounting Course Links http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/#Courses |
Dr. Jensen - CGC 313 Office Hours
Class CLS 349 Monday 06:00 - 08:45 p.m. |
Professor Jensen is in his office most every day of the week. You see him during office hours or at most any other time. You may also schedule an appointment by sending an email request to rjensen@trinity.edu
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Required Textbook: A Web Based Electronic Book M&G, Accounting Information Systems, by Uday S. Murthy and S. Michael Groomer (Cybertext Publishing, 2005). In order to take the required online quizzes every week, you must purchase a password for this book prior to the first class. You may purchase a password and book at http://www.cybertext.com/
Required Textbook: ISBN/ISSN: 0-324-22701-9 P&S = Perry and Schneider, Building Accounting Systems Using Access 2003, by James T. Perry and Gary P. Schneider (Southwestern Publishing Company, 2005).
Grades will be determined on the basis of percentage components as follows:
16% --- On-Line M&G weekly Quizzes
24% --- Examination 1 plus class quizzes and other assignments
20% --- Examination 2
40% --- Final Examination
100% --- Total Possible
The grading scale will be approximately as follows: 90%-100% = A Range; 80%-89% = B range; 70%-79% = C range; below 70% = F. Class participation and attendance are important and will be considered as subjective elements of your final grade, particularly in borderline cases.
All students are covered by a policy that prohibits dishonesty in academic work. The Academic Integrity Policy (AIP) covers all students who entered Trinity before the fall of 2004. The Academic Honor Code covers all those who entered the fall of 2004 or later.
The Integrity Policy and the Code share many features: each asserts that the academic community is based on honesty and trust; each contains the same violations; each provides for a procedure to determine if a violation has occurred and what the punishment will be; each provides for an appeal process.
The main difference is that the faculty implements the AIP while the Code is implemented by the Academic Honor Council. Under the Integrity Policy, the faculty member determines whether a violation has occurred as well as the punishment for the violation (if any) within certain guidelines. Under the Code, a faculty member will (or a student may) report an alleged violation to the Academic Honor Council. It is the task of the Council to investigate, adjudicate, and assign a punishment within certain guidelines if a violation has been verified.
Students who are under the Honor Code are required to pledge all written work that is submitted for a grade: “On my honor, I have neither given nor received any unauthorized assistance on this work” and their signature. The pledge may be abbreviated “pledged” with a signature.
Dr. Sandlin wrote the following Excused Absence Policy and requested that all accounting instructors in graduate courses adopt the following policy.
Excused Absence Policy
Master of Science in Accounting Program
The Master of Science in Accounting policy regarding absences from graduate classes is as follows:
The final grade (on a 100-point basis) will be reduced by three points each time a class that meets once a week is missed as the result of an unexcused absence and by one and a half points each time a class that meets twice a week is missed as the result of an unexcused absence.
Examples of unexcused absences include, but are not limited to, absences resulting from studying for other exams, finishing term papers, working, or engaging in non-emergency related travel.
A verifiable illness, a family emergency, or participation in a University sponsored event which the sponsor verifies as an excused absence will constitute excused absences.
Trinity University rules and regulations spelled out in the Student Handbook fully apply to this course.
All in-class Jensen quizzes will be graded. However, your lowest quiz score will be replaced by the percentage-weighted score earned on the final examination. For example, if you had a zero grade on a 20 point quiz and a 90% grade on the final examination, the lowest quiz score will be replaced by 18 points. If the lowest quiz score is greater than its replacement alternative, the quiz score will not be replaced. Students who have more than one absence excused by Professor Jensen will be assigned make-up projects that are not particularly fun projects. Unexcused absences result in a zero quiz score.
Students who leave class prior to a quiz will have to take a zero or do assigned projects. Leaving class early is highly discouraged. Students may not ask request answers to possible quiz questions in class prior to the quiz. However, students may seek help before the class from Professor Jensen or the teaching assistants.
None of the Murthy and Groomer on-line quiz scores will be replaced. If you are going to be absent from class, you must take that week's on-line quiz before the class date. No credit will be given for any on-line quiz taken after the due date.
Professor Jensen is in his Chapman 313 office most every day of the week. You see him during office hours or at most any other time. You may also schedule an appointment by sending an email request to rjensen@trinity.edu
Student Teaching Assistant Michelle Roberts
Tuesday 9:45 AM - 11:15 AM in Computer Lab of the Main Floor of the Trinity LibrarySunday 1:30 PM - 6:00 PM in Computer Lab of the Main Floor of the Trinity LibraryBy appointment at michelle.roberts@trinity.edu
The above graduate assistant will be available to help students in private appointments or student partner appointments (please schedule via email) in the Computer Lab on the main level of the library.
In ACCT 5342 we will be working with some large databases. You probably will not need the free encryption service. But you will love the YouSendIt free mailing service. Below you will see how you can send huge databases and video files to your home computer.
Below are two modules from the August 26, 2005 edition of Tidbits --- http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
I love the YouSendIt service that does not require zip or any form of file compression. You can learn how to use YouSendIt in less than a minute.
This is a good way to send video files!
August 23, 2005 message from Scott Bonacker
[lister@BONACKERS.COM]
This company says that you can upload large files to their server and email a link to download the file, all for free.
Does anyone have experience with this company?
I currently use filesanywhere.com for something similar, but that is a paid service. A few more bells and whistles to be sure though.
Scott Bonacker, CPA
Springfield, Missouri
Jensen
Comment:
I experimented with this by sending a 200 Mb video file to myself. It is a
fantastic free service that can be used when the file you want to send is too
large to attach to an email message. It will take a file up to 1 Gb without
even having to zip or otherwise compress the file.
My
students will find this useful for sending large database files to their home
computers.
You do not have to send the file by email to YouSendIt. All you have to do is
provide the recipient's email address and the file on your computer that you
want to send. You do not even have to supply your own name or your own email
address. The recipient then receives a message that he/she has seven days in to
download the file. YouSendIt will not store the file beyond seven days.
I cannot vouch for the security of data stored by YouSendIt. If you are sending sensitive data such as credit card numbers or a book draft that you've not yet secured a copyright number, then I suggest that you encrypt the file before sending it. There are various options for encryption. For example, most database programs like MS Access have encryption utilities in the software itself. Another encryption alternative (free) is described below.
Free encryption software
From the T.H.E. Journal Newsletter
on August 25, 2005
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Accounting Information Systems introduces students to the systems that underlie bookkeeping, accounting, financial reporting, tax reporting, and auditing in all business firms. Such systems are increasingly complex and in a continual state of flux do to rapidly changing technologies and security risks.
ACCT 5342 for the first six weeks will probably require twice as much time per week as your other courses. However, the time demands for the course will diminish in the second half of the semester when the workloads of your other courses increase.
There are three basic assignments that apply to each week for the first six weeks and carry on to a lesser extent after that:
1.
Students must print and supply written answers to the “Possible
Exam (Quiz) Questions” linked each week to the course syllabus at http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5342/acct5342.htm
Your answers will be checked each week by either a graduate assistant or the
course instructor. These written
answers will be available to you on the “open-note” portions of
examinations. How well you do on an
examination depends heavily upon having the answers to the assigned questions
each week. In most cases, the hint
to each question will guide you to the answer.
Sometimes the answers can be found in your Perry and Schneider textbook
that you must purchase from the bookstore. Note
that in Fall 2003, there is a new edition of that book such that used copies
probably will not suffice for assignments this semester.
You may work with your assigned partner each week when filling out the
answers to these questions. However,
you must maintain your own notebook of answers.
Each week either your assigned teaching assistant or the course
instructor must view your notebooks in order to detect students who are not
keeping up in the course.
2.
Most every week beginning in Week 2, you will be required to take
an online quiz for a chapter from the online textbook by Murthy and Groomer. This
book is not in the bookstore. Students
should immediately obtain a password and print the first three chapters of the
book entitled Accounting
Information Systems: A Database Approach. You
can purchase a password at
http://www.cybertext.com/forms/accountform.shtml
You will then be able to access the book and the online quizzes at any time
using the book list at http://www.cybertext.com/
Each week students are to take an online quiz in the presence of an assigned
student partner who then signs the attest form at http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5342/attest.htm
The online quizzes are relatively easy if you take notes while reading the
assigned chapter. You may use your
notes for each quiz. However, you
may not view a copy of the entire chapter will taking a quiz.
3.
The project of the course
consists of weekly assigned CPA examination questions. This
project was chosen following student requests the more of the curriculum be
devoted to preparation for the CPA examination. Each
week beginning in Week 2, students will make a short presentation explaining two
assigned questions from prior CPA examinations. In
addition, students are asked to create two questions that they think might
appear on a CPA examination. Top
grades for the projects will be given to students who show evidence of having
researched the answers to provide complete explanations. Answers
are not necessarily contained in the course textbooks.
Students will have to do Web searches in many instances.
At the end of the course students must turn in completed projects. Your
assigned questions can be found on the TigerNet path
J:\courses\acct5342\ProjectAssignmentsfFall203
All accounting graduate students are required to join a listserv called Jensen-b. This listserv enables any student to send a message to all other graduate accounting students.
The discussion group for our class is called Jensen-b. To sign up for it, you need to send an email message to listproc@trinity.edu. You don't need a subject heading. The only line in the body of the message should be this:subscribe Jensen-b Your Name(where of course "Your Name" is your name!). You should get a confirmation message indicating that you've been signed up.After that, if you want to send a message to the group, just send it to Jensen-b@trinity.edu
To join the listserv,
navigate as follows:
1.
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/its/
2.
Click on the link in the lower left corner to “Lyris List
Manager.”
3.
Click on Business Administration.
4.
Click on Jensen-b
5.
Join Jensen-b
Because
the Labor Day holiday falls on a Monday, the first class meeting in ACCT 5342 is
delayed one week. However, students
should begin immediately on the Class 2 assignments
that can be found at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5342/class02.htm
You should commence to meet with your assigned partner(s) for Class 2. Each
week thereafter you will be assigned a new partner. Note
that Class 2 assignments need not be completed until Class 2, but you should
commence working on these assignments immediately.
You should commence reading as ahead as far as possible in both your P&S and your M&G textbooks. In particular, study the first two chapters of your M&G textbook before the first class meeting.
Always back up your working files while you are working on a computer and always keep a
master copy of your work in your living quarters. It is easy to lose computer discs, so
always have back up copies of your work. Also, there are possible power outages and
computer viruses on campus computers. I suggest that you back up the files you are
creating or changing at least every 30 minutes while you are on a computer.
A problem arises because MS Access requires (for certain actions
like query creation) that users have write as well as read rights to a hard drive
containing a database. Students do not have write privileges to Drive J. Also there is a
problem that the new MS Access on the Windows NT lab machines requires database conversion
on most databases.
The P&S databases are on the CD-ROM that came with your P&S textbook. I have
copied the file to ITS Drive J on the path J:\courses\acct5342\access\psbook
Note that the files on CD-ROM discs are "read only." You must copy them into the
Junk or Temp folders on your Drive c and then remove the read only properties. If
you download my Drive j copies of thos chapters, the read only properties have already
been changed. However, you still must copy the files into your Junk or Temp folders
since students cannot write to Drive j.
Search engine for education sites --- http://www.searchedu.com/
Search for electronic books --- http://www.searchebooks.com/
For more help in online searching go to http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
Message for My Trinity University Students
Although
you cannot access Drive J off campus, I want to point out that you can access my
course video tutorials from anywhere in the world. The
link is http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
You will
find avi, rm, and wmf versions of most every video. I
recommend that you choose the wmf version that will play in the Windows Media
player that should be on your home computer.
If you have speakers on your home computer, there is an advantage of running these videos at home. On campus in the computer labs, you must first check out earphones from IMS and then hope the ear phones will work in a particular lab computer. It is a lot less hassle to run my tutorial videos on your home computer.
The main source of help in all your graduate accounting courses is Comperio from PwC. This is a database of accounting and auditing standards from around the world. It is an expensive database that is subscribed to by the Trinity University Library. However, you need not go to the Library's Web pages. Once you know the login name and password (which will be disclosed in class), you can log directly into comperio from http://www.pwccomperio.com/rrt/FormsLogin.asp?/rrt/comperio.asp
I have generated some video aids for my students using Camtasia. Camtasia is fantastic for showing and explaining something technical such as the application of software or the explanation of homework problems and illustrations in accounting. Camtasia will capture successions of screen changes and cursor movements on your computer screen. Camtasia will also capture your voice explanations as you go along. It will also make audio sounds when you click on the mouse or type on the keyboard. You may highlight cursor movements for the video. You can also dub audio, pictures, and video clips into a video that you captured at an earlier point in time.
Since the Camtasia reader and the compression codec files for playing Camtasia avi files were not installed on any of the Trinity University lab computers, I was worried that my students could not see and hear the video helpers that I created. Then I discovered that the Camptasia Producer that accompanies the Camtasia recorder will convert the captured avi files into RealMedia (rm) files. The benefits of converting the avi files to rm files include the following:
I have placed selected Camtasia avi files and a RealMedia files at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Unless you have installed the Camtasia reader, you probably will prefer to
download the RealMedia version of this sample video capture of Exercise 03-07 of
the Perry and Schneider book on Accounting Information Systems.
Be patient when downloading the above files. The avi version is 29 Mb and the RealMedia version is 14.7 Mb.
Camtasia from TechSmith is described at http://www.techsmith.com/
Also see the following article praising the pedagogy of Camtasia:
"A
Hassle-free and Inexpensive Way to 'Videotape' Class Lectures," by Rene Leo
E. Ordonez,
EDUCAUSE Review, September/October 2001,
pp. 14-15 --- http://www.educause.edu/pub/er/erm.html
Helpful Documents at Bob Jensen's Web Site
(Will open in a new browser window.)
Helpful Links for This Course
(Will open in a new browser window.)
Search Helpers
(Will open in a new browser window.)
Other Helpers
The programs we will be using this semester should have icons in the Windows. However, if you cannot find an icon these are the paths to the execution files on the Tigernet:
ACCT 5342 ACCOUNTING INFORMATION SYSTEMS- Fall SEMESTER 2003
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MONDAY | MONDAY |
Class Begins Today in Cowles 349 Course OverviewIf a mdb database file will not open in your computer, copy the file into your computer, go to My Computer or Windows Explorer, right click on the file name, choose Properties, and then click on Unblock. |
Week 01 August 29 (Continued) Begin Preliminary Course Activities (listed above) Note the Week 2 Assignments. |
(No class due to MLK holiday) Class 02 Partnership Assignment
|
Week 02 September 05 (Continued) Assigned Reading
If a mdb database file will not open in your computer, copy the file into your computer, go to My Computer or Windows Explorer, right click on the file name, choose Properties, and then click on Unblock. |
In Class 03
Partnership Assignment
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Week 03 September 12 (Continued) Assigned Reading
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In Class 04 Partnership Assignment (Click Here to View Possible Exam Questions)M&G online quiz for Chapter 3 must be graded before October 1
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Week 04 September 19 (Continued) Assigned Reading
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Examination 1Week 05 Partnership Assignment
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Week 05 September 26 (Continued) Assigned Reading
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In Class 06 Partnership Assignment
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Week 06 October 03 (Continued) Assigned Reading
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Week 07 October 10
(No class on October 10) In Class 07 Partnership Assignment
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Week 07 October 10 (Continued) Assigned
Reading
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Week 08 October 17Exam Review Hints --- http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5342/HintsExam01.htmIn Class 08 Partnership Assignment
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Week 08 October 17 (Continued)
Assigned
Reading
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Week 09 October 24
Examination 2 M&G online quiz for Chapter 8 must be graded before November 5
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Week 09 October 24 (Continued)
Assigned Readings
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Week 10 October 31 In Class 10
Assignment M&G online quiz for Chapter 9 must be graded before class today
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Week 10 October 31 (Continued)
Assigned Readings
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In Class 11
Assignment M&G online quiz for Chapter 10
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Week 11 November 07 (Continued) Assigned Reading
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Week 12 November 14 (No Class) Assurance Services and
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Week 12 November 14 (Continued) Assigned Reading
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(No class on November 21) XBRL Review http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/xmlrdf.htm
(Click Here to View Possible Exam Questions) |
Week 13 November 21 (Continued) Assigned Reading |
In Class 14
Assignment M&G online quiz for Chapter 14 must be graded before class begins
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Week 14 November 28 (Continued) Assigned Reading
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Week 15 December 05 | Week 15 December 05 |
Final Examination |
Week 16 December 12(Continued) See http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5342/HintsForFinal.htm |