UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS DEPARTMENT OF ACCOUNTING, OPERATIONS & OIS

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UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS DEPARTMENT OF ACCOUNTING, OPERATIONS & OIS Accounting 415/615-X50 Intermediate Financial Accounting II Summer 2014 Course Outline Instructor: E-mail: Office Hours: Linda Hayes, CA, MBA lhayes@ualberta.ca Before class and by appointment Course home page: https://ulearn.ualberta.ca Prerequisite: ACCTG 414 or ACCTG 412 with a minimum grade of C-. Required Materials: Beechy, Conrod, and Farrell. Intermediate Accounting, 5th Edition, Volume 2, McGraw-Hill Canada. Blackboard/ULearn here you will find lecture slides, solutions to recommended problems and a list of assignments to be completed. McGraw-Hill Connect this is the companion website to the textbook. You may access it at: http://connect.mcgraw-hill.com/class/l_hayes_summer_2014_1 Course Description and Objectives: ACCTG 415/615 is the second part of Intermediate Financial Accounting. This course builds upon materials learnt in previous financial accounting courses including ACCTG 311 and ACCTG 414. The focus of this course is on accounting for financing, liabilities and equity, and related income measurement and disclosure with an in-depth examination of complex measurement issues. Together with Accounting 414, Intermediate Financial Accounting covers virtually every important corporate reporting topic. Students are expected to master Page 1 of 5

the vast body of knowledge on accounting for activities of an enterprise and preparing accounting information. Time Commitment: A professional accountant s expertise depends on both technical skill and professional judgment ability. During this course, students are expected to work towards developing the expertise through a lot of quantitative practice and a thorough understanding of the rationale (conceptual basis, assumptions, facts of circumstances, etc.) of each accounting method. This is a difficult course. For each topic covered, there can be more lectures that will progressively cover more difficult and technically challenging material. If you don t understand the earlier material you WILL NOT be able to understand the later lectures. In the past, students who failed to keep up with the course materials throughout the semester did very poorly in the exams. Please raise questions at an early stage. Course Evaluation There will be a midterm examination a final examination as well as assignments on McGraw Hill Connect. The weighting of these components is indicated below: Date Weight Midterm Thurs. July 24 40% Final Exam Thurs. Aug 14 40% Assignments See Connect 20% Total 100% All assignments and exams are designed to test your understanding of the concepts you need to learn rather than your ability to memorize and reproduce class or homework examples. As a result, all questions may be slightly different from the class discussion questions and the self studied questions. All exams are closed book. Students that miss the mid-term exam for an acceptable reason will have their midterm weight added to the final exam in keeping with University policy. Page 2 of 5

You are responsible for all assigned materials, including handouts, items posted on Blackboard, and any additional material introduced in class. The mid-term exam will cover the material in Chapters 12, 13, 14 and 15. The final exam is cumulative, which means that all course material is examinable. Further information on exam coverage will be discussed only in class, so that every student has the same information. Please bring your student ID card or other acceptable photo identification on the day you write an exam. Grades in the Course Please note that the University average grade distribution is based on all courses across campus including courses of varying levels of difficulty. Traditionally, the median (mean) grades in the courses in the AOIS department are lower than the University average. As a result, the distribution of grades in this course will not necessarily coincide exactly with the University average distribution. In the past several years, the mean grade in this course has been B-. Grade distributions may be tight and the line for the cut-off must be drawn somewhere. The marks described in this syllabus represent the only marks available to students. Makeup or extra work to improve your grade is not possible. If you feel that your grade on either an exam or a quiz is incorrect, you must notify the instructor in writing during the one-week period following the exam. Once the final grades have been assigned, they will not be changed except in the case of a recording error. It is conceivable that you could be 1% away from the next grade point, however grades will not be bumped just because you are close to the cut-off. Appeals of final grades will follow the university guidelines for marks appeals. Absences from Exams and Quizzes In the event that the midterm examination is missed for acceptable reasons, no make-ups will be given. Instead, the credit assigned will be added to the weight of the final examination. An acceptable reason could include, but is not limited to, illness, death in the Page 3 of 5

family or other family emergencies. As per University policy, no medical note is required for an absence due to illness. You should email me as soon as possible to advise me of the absence and the reason for it. Once you have written an exam, grades will not be reallocated due to explanations provided after the fact. Therefore, if you are too ill to write an exam, please do not attempt the exam. If a student is absent from the final exam, he or she must obtain permission from the Faculty s Undergraduate Office to write a deferred final exam. Code of Student Behavior Students attention is drawn to the Code of Student Behavior, which addresses plagiarism, cheating, and aiding and abetting. A copy of the Code can be obtained at http://www.ualberta.ca/~unisecr/. If you have any questions regarding this matter please talk to the instructor or the Undergraduate Office. Ignorance is NOT a defense! Course Protocols Students are responsible for all information provided in class (announcements, lectures, problem analysis, etc.). If you cannot make the class, it is suggested that you arrange for someone else in the class to provide you with the information you missed. Page 4 of 5

Tentative Course Calendar Date Chapter Topic July 8 Introduction Ch 12 Liabilities 10 Ch 12 Ch 13 Liabilities S/H Equity 15 Ch 13 S/H Equity 17 Ch 14 Complex Debt & Equity 22 Ch 15 Income Tax 24 Midterm Exam (40%) 29 Ch 16 Tax Losses 31 Ch 17 Leases August 5 Ch 18 Post-Employment Benefits 7 Ch 19 EPS 12 Ch 20 Accounting Changes 14 Final Exam (40%) Page 5 of 5