Wed April 13, 2011
I have visited at length with the intermed I and II classes about how we do what we do in those courses. As evidence of my sincere interest and general dissatisfaction with all existing texts, I sent this to Cengage, Pearson, and McGraw Hill.
I am printing this to show my concern and to elicit your comments.
Subject: Intermediate Accounting – Dennis Rants On
All
1. Accounting books are selected by accounting academics not the
students. This is why the books have gotten so long and heavily
footnoted. In addition all feature dazzling displays of fancy math
formulas. While this may send spirits soaring of the accounting types
that frequent the Journal of Accountancy, it does little for bewildered
students that never mastered algebra I.
2. Since the the big publishers compete in the same market and listen to
the same 'peer reviewed' academics, the three books from Cengage MH and
Wiley are remarkably similar, right down to the topics covered in the
same numbered chapters. So all are putting out the same product, rather
like the old days of GM Ford Chrysler, a big three but all the same.
3. It took VW and Toyota to break up the perception of what a car should
be, American Motors never did it. Different out of the box thinking,
like making tinted glass, reclining seats and four speed transmissions
standard as well as the FM radio, way back in 1972 on the Toyota
Corolla. Detroit never recovered.
4. The big books of intermed acct such as they exist are probably fine
for the top 50 schools where there is at least some sort of entrance
requirement. and there is a perform or you are out requirement if a
grade level is not maintained . But this is not the case for the other
1150 colleges in America. The book is grossly unfair to these students who have a knowledge and background gap.
But as they discover that is not accounting; it is bookkeeping. The other big gap is the assumption gap. All these books assume students know for example, what a put, call , or derivative is and how it works. Unless you know that you could not possibly understand the entries for them.
5. Most of the community colleges only make this worse. They take the
students money and pass them on citing outstanding completion rates.
Most of the intermed students I get cannot complete a standard ten
column worksheet with adjusting entries. This was the gold plated
standard when I took principles in 1967; yet just this semester in
Intermed II one student have never encountered a ten column worksheet.
6. So what happens? Well the students struggle,
7. Now look at www.khanacademy.org. It contains over 2,000 short videos,
not on accounting by close enough to get the idea, lots and lots of math
videos on every subject imaginable.
8. Does watching a video teach one in the same way that reading the
chapter and working a problem teaches one, I frankly doubt it, I think
it is like a power point good exposure.I suspect a video like a power point can
gain some familiarity but not understanding or content mastery.I bought a visual learner set of DVDs on Excel, it helped but honestly I did not learn how to use Excel, the reason is that I was watching, I was not participating. Only active involvement results in knowledge gain.
9. Give the textbook companies credit, there are power points, games,
podcasts, m/c exams, you name it. There are books now written for
students that will not read the book (a conundrum indeed) with special
boxes in the margins, cornerstone from cengage and whitecotton from MH
are both good examples. But if this is the case perhaps we should
jettison the text and just focus on the boxes.
10.Derivatives are more important than stocks which is why D Bank wants
the NYSE for Euronext, not the stock exchange part of the NYSE. Yet
there is scant coverage of derivatives in any of the books. I dare say
the average acct teacher cannot explain the difference between a put and
a call, but I digress.
11. I suspect the better idea would be a combination of the
presentation form of
Schaums Accounting Books, these are outline and short paragraph
interspersed with solved examples, like the 1960s accounting books no
fancy pictures or stories about companies that the students do not read
anyway
Gleim's outline with mandatory questions to answer, it is a format by
topic, Gleim is a leading provider of cpa review texts, the arrangement
of their books after forty years of working with students is no
accident.
I would include the graphics and tables that are pretty well done in
the three main books today. But even then many of these are overly
complex.
There needs to be more requirement of content mastery, yes, if you
cannot do the ten column worksheet, you cannot answer simple questions
about what financial statement which account will appear.
And so like the automobile world of the late 1960s the accounting world
awaits some out of the box thinking.
VW took 10% of the American market in 1967 with a car designed in
Germany in the 1930s, that lacked an air conditioner no less.
12. I don't know the 'guys in the carpeted offfices' at the big firms.
But I do know I am right about the failure of 1,000 page intermed books
to resonate with the students.
Arguments for and agains e books are only about the delivery system, not
the method of teaching. And frankly e books are about where personal
computers were in 1980, no common platform. Right now a paper book is
still easier to use.
The Datsun 240 Z was a faux Jaguar XKE in affordable form, it changed
everything. Japan was the new innovator, not Detroit. Send this e mail
around, please, somewhere there is
the next 240 Z of accounting textbooks. It does not exist yet but here
is the outline for what it ought to be.
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