ACC 331 Federal Income Tax Accounting Syllabus and Course Schedule Spring 2016 Professor E-Mail Phone Course Website Office Location Teaching Assistant Wayne Nesbitt, Ph.D. nesbitt@broad.msu.edu (517) 432-4407 via Desire2Learn (D2L) (https://d2l.msu.edu) N261 Business College Complex (BCC) Connor St. Charles Office Hours Tuesdays/Thursdays from 11:40 to 12:40 pm or by appointment (Location: 139 Akers Hall) Help Lab Fridays from 1:00 to 4:00 pm, N17 BCC (Ground floor
Words: 2938 - Pages: 12
Course Meeting Day/Time: Monday - 6:00 – 10.00 p.m. Professor Information: Dr. Jones Olajide E-mail: jones.olajide@strayer.edu Phone: 240-217-0141 Welcome, students! I have the privilege of being your Financial Accounting course instructor for this term. I’m excited about the opportunity to get to know you, and I’m looking forward to a happy and productive summer 2014 Quarter. I will always be available to meet with individual student before or after class on Mondays
Words: 7627 - Pages: 31
Solutions Manual COST ACCOUNTING Fifteenth Edition Charles T. Horngren Srikant M. Datar Madhav V. Rajan ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------
Words: 9620 - Pages: 39
Outline AP/ADMS 3585 3.0 Intermediate Accounting I Course Director : | Alla Volodina | | Section : | M | | Course website: | | | Date/Time: | Wednesday 7:00 pm to 10 pm | | Location : | ACE 009 | | Instructor Office Hours: | By appointment | E-Mail Address : | adms3585@yorku.ca | Calendar Description This course, in conjunction with AP/ADMS 3595 3.00, develops thorough knowledge and understanding of generally accepted accounting principles and financial statement analytical
Words: 5073 - Pages: 21
COURSE OBJECTIVES Financial and management accounting are more closely linked in practice than one might expect from reading traditional textbooks and the problems to be resolved often have income tax and auditing consequences as well. This seminar is designed to provide you with opportunities to apply general concepts and principles learned in intermediate and advanced financial accounting courses to new economic transactions and business decisions. Cases will be used to permit you to practice
Words: 2858 - Pages: 12
Untitled Document Page 1 of 12 Syllabus Course Syllabus Brent Tabor brentmtabor@bellsouth.net Office: League City, TX Office Hours: Mondays and Tuesdays at 8:00 PM Central Phone: 409-692-3081 Hello students. Welcome to Intermediate Accounting II. My name is Brent M. Tabor and I am excited to be your instructor for the class. A little about myself…..I was born in south Louisiana and currently reside in League City, TX. My wife and I have three children, which keep us extremely busy
Words: 3315 - Pages: 14
ACCT553 Week 5 Homework Solutions _________________________________________________________ Chapter 14 1. Please explain how Charitable Contributions come into play in determining "Corporate" taxable income. (5 pts) The maximum amount deductible by a corporation for charitable contributions is 10 percent of its adjusted taxable income. The deduction is limited to the lesser of 10 percent of adjusted taxable income or the sum of the initial measures of all property donated during the tax year. Adjusted
Words: 543 - Pages: 3
| |CHAPTER | |Financial Statements and | |2 | |Accounting Concepts/Principles | | | | | |
Words: 6192 - Pages: 25
Version 0.99 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign College of Commerce and Business Administration BADM 467 - Process Management Summer 2003 Dilip Chhajed Nick Petruzzi chhajed@uiuc.edu petruzzi@uiuc.edu 323 DKH 328D DKH office hours: office hours: Description Process Management includes a myriad of activities: insuring that a product or service is of high quality, choosing the appropriate design and technology for producing a good or service
Words: 2041 - Pages: 9
(b) creative problem solving, and (c) innovation for entrepreneurship and business growth. Students will develop their own creative competencies through a combination of case analyses and kinesthetic activities designed to encourage innovative solutions to modern business problems. TEXTBOOK No textbook is required. Other required materials are specified in the course schedule. USEFUL WEBSITES You must know how to access the Keuka College library resources (using your Keuka username and password)
Words: 4220 - Pages: 17