Personal Transferable Skills in Accounting Education

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Accounting education
Accounting Graduates
Accounting skills
Accounting Studies
Accounting Work Experience
Case Study Programme
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Competency Map
Comprehensive Case Analysis
Contextualising Accounting Education
CPA Australia
Curriculum and pedagogy
curriculum development
Employability
employability skills
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Expectation Performance Gap
Generic Skill Development
Generic Skills
GPA
Grade Point Average
graduate attributes
higher education pedagogy
integrating soft skills in accounting programmes
McCourt Larres
Personal Transferable Skills
Prior Academic Performance
professional competencies
Public Administration
Supervised Work Placement
SWE
Ta Te
Technical Accountancy Knowledge
UK Business School
University Graduate Attributes
Work Ready Graduates
workplace readiness

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138818309
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Sep 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The development of generic skills (often referred to as ‘soft skills’) in accounting education has been a focus of discussion and debate for several decades. During this time employers and professional bodies have urged accounting educators to consider and develop curricula which provide for the development and assessment of these skills. In addition, there has been criticism of the quality of accounting graduates and their ability to operate effectively in a global economy. Embedding generic skills in the accounting curriculum has been acknowledged as an appropriate means of addressing the need to provide ‘knowledge professionals’ to meet the needs of a global business environment.

Personal Transferable Skills in Accounting Education illustrates how generic skills are being embedded and evaluated in the accounting curriculum by academics from a range of perspectives. Each chapter provides an account of how the challenge of incorporating generic skills in the accounting curriculum within particular educational environments has been addressed.

The challenges involved in generic skills development in higher education have not been limited to the accounting discipline. This book provides examples which potentially inform a wide range of discipline areas. Academics will benefit from reading the experiences of incorporating generic skills in the accounting curriculum from across the globe.

This book was originally published as a themed issue of Accounting Education: an international journal.

Kim Watty is Professor of Accounting in the School of Accounting, Economics and Finance at Deakin University, Australia. She has published widely and completed major research projects in accounting education, both nationally and internationally, and is an Associate Editor of Accounting Education: an international journal.

Beverley Jackling is Professor of Accounting at Victoria University, Australia. Her research interests include the educational aspects of business and accounting education. She has published widely in accounting education and been the recipient of numerous national and internationally competitive research grants and awards. She is an Associate Editor of Issues in Accounting Education.

Richard M. S. Wilson is Emeritus Professor of Business Administration & Financial Management in the Business School, and Visiting Professor in the Department of Information Science, at Loughborough University, UK. He is the founding editor of Accounting Education: an international journal.