Checking date: 04/06/2021


Course: 2021/2022

Accounting Introduction
(13157)
Dual Bachelor in Law and Business Administration (Plan: 410 - Estudio: 229)


Coordinating teacher: GARCIA OSMA, BEATRIZ

Department assigned to the subject: Business Administration Department

Type: Basic Core
ECTS Credits: 6.0 ECTS

Course:
Semester:

Branch of knowledge: Social Sciences and Law



Objectives
In this course, students will learn the accounting process and the use of accounting information in business decisions. It will provide students with a thorough understanding of the theoretical foundations underlying financial reporting, revenue recognition, and the matching of expenses; financial statement presentation; and accounting for assets. The course's primary objective is to give students the tools necessary to understand and execute appropriate accounting procedures. Students must understand both how transactions lead to financial statements and how to determine and evaluate the outcomes of that process from the perspectives of managers, shareholders, auditors, and others. After finishing this course students should be able to: 1. Use and understand accounting vocabulary 2. Apply accounting concepts and principles 3. Use the accounting equation 4. Analyse business transactions 5. Complete the accounting process 6. Prepare the financial statements Skills development: -Ability to work individually -Critical thinking
Skills and learning outcomes
Description of contents: programme
COURSE OBJECTIVES Financial accounting plays a crucial role in the allocation of resources in the economic system while the information that it facilitates is used by a wide number of different agents in their respective decision-making processes. The objective of the course is to enhance students¿ ability to capture economic transactions using the accounting system and to elaborate compact information about the firms¿ value and the wealth created by the firm in a given time period. In addition to preparing this information, students should be able to understand and interpret this information as it is provided in the firms¿ statements (i.e. balance sheet, income statement and the notes). The first part of the course introduces students to the financial accounting environment, financial statements, the accounting cycle, and the theoretical framework of accounting measurement. The second part of the course covers the elements of financial statements, emphasizing the process to obtain the accounting income. PROGRAMME Chapter 1: Introduction to accounting - 1.1 Economic activity and information needs - 1.2 Accounting: formal concept - 1.3 Divisions of accounting - 1.4 The importance of accounting information - 1.5 The users of accounting information - 1.6 How does accounting work? - 1.7 The characteristics of accounting information - 1.8 Accounting standardisation (regulation) Chapter 2: Assets, Liabilities and Equity. The accounting equation - 2.1 The value of the company - 2.2 Economic structure and financing structure. Assets, Liabilities and equity. The accounting equation. - 2.3 Categories of assets, liabilities and owners ¿ equity - 2.4 Business transactions and the accounting equation - 2.5 The balance sheet - 2.6 The income statement (profit and loss account) Chapter 3: The accounting method - 3.1 Accounting for business transactions - 3.2 The account: the double- entry system - 3.3 The accounting books: the Journal and the Ledger. The Trial Balance - 3.4 Recording transactions in the Journal - 3.5 Charts of Accounts - 3.6 Accounting¿s foundation: Principles and Concepts Chapter 4: The accounting process - 4.1 The phases of the accounting process - 4.2 Opening phase - 4.3 Transactions phase - 4.4 Closing phase - 4.4.1 Determining accounting income - 4.4.2 Closing the books - 4.4.4 Preparing the Financial Statements Chapter 5: Valuation and reporting transactions - 5.1 Measuring transactions (assets and inventories) - 5.2 Recording purchases and sales of inventories (stocks) - 5.2.1. The Perpetual system 5.2.2. The Periodic system - 5.3 Financing activities - 5.3.1. Internal finance sources - 5.3.2. External finance sources Chapter 6: Calculation of accounting earnings and producing the financial statements. - 6.1 Expenses and revenues. - 6.2. Accrued expenses and revenues. - 6.3. Adjusting changes in inventories with the periodic system - 6.4. Adjusting the value of the assets
Learning activities and methodology
This course is appropriate for first year students where the lecturer's main role is to act as a guide and a tutor of the learning process. With this system, the student is encouraged to have a more dynamic and participative attitude in class. The student will learn to organize and schedule his/her own timetable. The overall content of the course comprises: 1. Material to follow the lectures: basic reference book and slides 2. Set of exercises related to each chapter, which is to be solved at the practical classes. This material will be provided to the student at the beginning of the course. 3. Tasks, which are part of the continuous assessment process. These have to be solved in class by the students. 4. An end-of-chapter short quiz which will allow students to test their understanding of the material covered in the chapter. A course timetable is also provided to the student which includes a detailed description of the dates for submission of tasks and the contents to be covered in each theory lecture and each practical class. The course consists of a one-hour and a half theory lecture, and a one-hour and a half practical class per week. The purpose of the lectures is twofold: Primarily to enable the students to understand and apply fundamental accounting concepts, accounting methods, and accounting conventions. I.e. the focus is on possible ways of recognizing and measuring events presented in the balance sheet and the income statement. Secondly to enable the students to understand the required methods of recognizing and measuring events presented in the balance sheet and income statement according to the Accounting Standards. The purpose of the practical classes is: To train the students to solve financial accounting problems that, in certain cases contain more than one of the subjects taught in the theory lectures. In the practical classes the students apply the financial accounting techniques from the lectures to specific problems. Specific exercises that show how the accounting process works and how the financial statements are produced will be addressed. This will enable students to test their understanding of the material covered at the lectures.
Assessment System
  • % end-of-term-examination 60
  • % of continuous assessment (assigments, laboratory, practicals...) 40




Basic Bibliography
  • Walter T. Harrison Jr.; Charles T. Horngren; C. William Thomas; Wendy M. Tietz. Financial Accounting, 11h edition. Prentice Hall.
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The course syllabus may change due academic events or other reasons.