BSC N400 Accounting,
BSC N401 Accounting (Including Foundation Year),
BSC N402 Accounting (Including Year Abroad),
BSC N404 Accounting (Including Placement Year),
BSC N420 Accounting and Finance,
BSC N422 Accounting and Finance (Including Placement Year),
BSC NN43 Accounting and Finance (Including Foundation Year),
BSC NNK3 Accounting and Finance (Including Year Abroad),
MACCN440 Accounting and Finance,
MACCN441 Accounting and Finance (Including Placement Year),
MACCN442 Accounting and Finance (Including Year Abroad),
BSC NN24 Accounting and Management,
BSC NN27 Accounting and Management (Including Placement Year),
BSC NNK2 Accounting and Management (Including Year Abroad),
BSC N4L1 Accounting with Economics (Including Foundation Year),
BSC NKL1 Accounting with Economics (Including Year Abroad),
BSC NL41 Accounting with Economics,
BSC NL44 Accounting with Economics (Including Placement Year),
BSC N390 Banking and Finance,
BSC N391 Banking and Finance (Including Foundation Year),
BSC N392 Banking and Finance (Including Placement Year),
BSC NH90 Banking and Finance (Including Year Abroad),
BSC N200 Business Management,
BSC N201 Business Management (Including Foundation Year),
BSC N202 Business Management (Including Year Abroad),
BSC N204 Business Management (Including Placement Year),
BA NR19 Business Management and Modern Languages,
BA N1R9 Business Management with a Modern Language,
BSC N300 Finance,
BSC N301 Finance (Including Foundation Year),
BSC N302 Finance (Including Year Abroad),
BSC N304 Finance (Including Placement Year),
BSC N2N5 Marketing Management (Including Foundation Year),
BSC NN25 Marketing Management,
BSC NN2M Marketing Management (Including Placement Year),
BSC NNF5 Marketing Management (Including Year Abroad),
BA L147 Financial Economics and Accounting (Including Placement Year),
BA L148 Financial Economics and Accounting,
BA L149 Financial Economics and Accounting (Including Year Abroad),
BA LX14 Financial Economics and Accounting (Including Foundation Year),
BA N19R Business Management and Language Studies,
BSC N344 Finance and Management,
BSC N345 Finance and Management (Including Year Abroad),
BSC N346 Finance and Management (Including Placement Year),
BSC N347 Finance and Management (Including Foundation Year),
MMANNN35 Marketing Management,
MMANNN36 Marketing Management (Including Placement Year),
MMANNN37 Marketing Management (Including Year Abroad),
BSC N260 Business and Human Resource Management,
BSC N261 Business and Human Resource Management (including Placement Year),
BSC N262 Business and Human Resource Management (including Year Abroad),
BSC N263 Business and Human Resource Management (Including Foundation Year),
BA N29RCO Business Management with Language Studies
The aim of this module is to introduce students to financial accounting and to some basic principles and techniques to analyse and interpret financial statements. Although the module is intended as an introduction for students majoring in accounting it should also be of benefit to other students who wish to gain some insight into the practices of accounting.
The module will commence with a discussion of the nature and role of accounting and will consider who uses accounting information and for what purposes. The module will then discuss the contents of annual reports, especially the narrative sections, and the qualitative characteristics of accounting information. After this, the module will be concerned with key elements and the format of financial statements. The objective of this part of the module is to enable students to prepare company financial statements using trial balance. The module will also include discussions of the techniques that can be used to analyse and interpret financial statements.
On successful completion of the module, students will be able to:
1. Describe the nature, uses and purposes of financial accounting, and outline the role and limitations of financial reporting in providing useful information to decision-makers.
2. Understand the nature and contents of annual reports.
3. Understand and explain qualitative characteristics of accounting information and its importance in ensuring the usefulness of financial statements.
4. Understand the elements of income statement and balance sheet and construct both financial statements for a company using a trial balance.
5. Explain the difference between cash and profit and understand the elements of cash flow statement.
6. Analyse financial statements using financial ratios and explain the limitations of techniques of analysis.
Skills for Your Professional Life
(Transferable Skills - reflecting the skills mapping recently undertaken in EBS)
The module is designed to provide students with a set of transferable skills which will be applicable in their professional life. Specifically, the module seeks to support students to develop the following skills:
Analytical Domain
Academic and Cognitive Skills
A1 Synthesis and bringing together concepts and ideas
Data Analysis Skills
D1 Analysing quantitative data
D3 Analysing financial data
Personal Effectiveness Domain
Soft Skills
S1 Teamwork
S2 Showing leadership
Communication Skills
C1 Writing a business report
Professional Practice Domain
Technology Skills
T1 Core IT skills (word, excel, PowerPoint, outlook)
The module comprises one 2-hour lecture and one 1-hour class per week as well as online voluntary support classes offered via Zoom fortnightly, over 10 weeks. Homework questions and practice tests will be available on MyLab online platform throughout the term.
The purpose of the lecture is twofold: first, to discuss and outline the appropriate analytical concepts and their ramifications and, second, to stimulate students' interest and direct their reading. It is very important that students complete all the readings immediately after each lecture because these are an integral part of the course.
The purpose of the classes is for students to demonstrate that they can apply analytical concepts and general principles to particular problems. These problems, which are a mixture of technical exercises and discussion topics, must be prepared in advance of the designated class. Students should note that it may not be possible to cover the answers to all questions in class but it is expected that students will attempt all the questions set.
The purpose of the voluntary support classes is to provide academic support and answer students' questions.
The purpose of MyLab homework questions is to strengthen students' understandings of the lecture contents and prepare for the in-class tests and final exam, both will also be run on MyLab.