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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
A study of the techniques used to accumulate, measure, plan, and control the costs of an organization’s products and services. Prerequisites: BLAW 104, ECON 221, ECON 222 or 223, IDS 205, ACC 206, and completion of or concurrent enrollment in ACC 210 and IDS 110.
Prerequisite:
(ECON-222 OR ECON-223) AND BLAW-104 AND ECON-221 AND IDS-205 AND ACC-206
Corequisite:
ACC-210 AND IDS-110
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3.00 Credits
A study of various taxation bases, methods of taxation, and the purpose of taxation. The goal of the course is to provide the student with concepts of taxation so that the effect on management decisions may be understood. Primary emphasis will focus on business entities at the federal level. Prerequisite: ACC 205.
Prerequisite:
ACC-205
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3.00 Credits
A study of generally accepted accounting principles as applied to partnerships, corporate consolidations, and international operations. Prerequisite: ACC 311.
Prerequisite:
ACC-311
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3.00 Credits
An exploration of the concepts of taxation by providing opportunities to investigate the effects of taxation on the various entities (corporations, partnerships, trusts, and individuals). The emphasis will center on the concept of complete taxation planning involving long-range and short-range effects of management decisions. Prerequisite: ACC 350.
Prerequisite:
ACC-350
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3.00 Credits
A study of the independent accountant’s assurance, attestation, and audit services. Topics include risk, evidence, standards, control, reports, liability, ethics, and the effect of regulation. Prerequisites: ACC 311 and ACC 315.
Prerequisite:
ACC-311 AND ACC-330
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
An independent research effort. It requires approval of a research proposal by a member of the College faculty and the Dean. May not be used as a substitute for a course which covers the proposed research area. Prerequisite: approved research proposal and permission of the Dean.
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3.00 Credits
A study of actuarial models in the context of insurance. Core topics include autoregressive time-series, random walks, forecasting and estimation with linear time-series models, annuities and basic life contingencies. Additional topics may be chosen from statistical rate making, credibility, simulation, utility theory, ruin theory, actuarial professional issues. Normally offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: MATH/ IDS 340 or ECON 325.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Opportunities for students to have direct, supervised experience in public agencies or private industry, such as insurance companies or consulting firms. S/U grade. Prerequisites: Actuarial Science major and approval of the Chair of the Actuarial Science program.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Students study advanced topics in actuarial science under the supervision of a faculty member. Written work is required. Prerequisite: consent of the Chair of the Actuarial Science program.
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3.00 Credits
An independently supervised course of study taken under the direction of a member of the Administrative Committee on American Studies usually during the student's senior year. Students are expected to produce a major paper that reflects intensive reading and research in an area pertaining to American culture and to employ the interdisciplinary methods characteristics of American Studies as a field. Before registering for this course students must submit a prospectus to the Administrative Committee for approval. Required for majors.
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