Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you or your dc have gotten one, how difficult was it? Dd is switching her major for it (her choice after research and talking to adviser) thinking career prospects will be strong, but she worries about the difficulty level. She is an excellent student all-around but not a Math star, just works hard. And did you/your dc have any real passion for accounting, or did you/they go into it for the employment opportunities?
Would your daughter be frustrated when answers that are perfectly reasonable but not exactly what was asked for are marked wrong?
Would she be irritated if the answer to a “why” question was “because this is the way it is done?”
Accounting is about consistency over creativity or brilliance. It is far better to be consistent, even consistently wrong (in some cases), than to approach each task as a question of judgment.
Also, accounting, particularly at CPA firms, tends to have a ton of workaholics. The firms hire a ton of people in, work them like crazy, and the few that are both good and stick it out can become partners and make pretty serious money but most burn out or quit.
The job market for accounting is good and CPAs in particular are in short supply. (Just search for “CPA shortage.”)
Anonymous wrote:If you or your dc have gotten one, how difficult was it? Dd is switching her major for it (her choice after research and talking to adviser) thinking career prospects will be strong, but she worries about the difficulty level. She is an excellent student all-around but not a Math star, just works hard. And did you/your dc have any real passion for accounting, or did you/they go into it for the employment opportunities?
Anonymous wrote:If you or your dc have gotten one, how difficult was it? Dd is switching her major for it (her choice after research and talking to adviser) thinking career prospects will be strong, but she worries about the difficulty level. She is an excellent student all-around but not a Math star, just works hard. And did you/your dc have any real passion for accounting, or did you/they go into it for the employment opportunities?
Anonymous wrote:My kid just graduated with an Accounting degree and has passed 2 of the 4 CPA exam sections. They were originally a Finance major but got convinced that having a CPA would significantly increase job opportunities. They've got a super outgoing personality and folks who know my kid are surprised about the Accounting path, but honestly I think this was a smart move.
So no real passion for accounting, more so for money 😁. Oh and they were just a so-so student in HS but once in college and with a plan they were motivated and classes seemed to be easy.
Anonymous wrote:I graduated with an accounting degree in 2020. The hardest math class was "business calc," which was equivalent to high school precalc, but that could vary by school. In my current corporate accounting role, I rarely do anything beyond middle school math standards.
I've never met anyone "passionate about accounting" lol - but I've always enjoyed spreadsheets, analyzing data, and tracking my own personal finances.
Anonymous wrote:I work closely with a lot of accountants at my company. By and large, the best ones are detail oriented and hard working, but were not necessarily math or accounting majors in college. You don't actually need to do a lot of math, Excel and accounting software does the calculations for you. You need to have a good sense of numbers and systems more than being a math whiz.