Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a freshman college student majoring in business. I wish he’d consider accounting and I’ve “gently” suggested it but his answer is that he’s not wonderful in math. Are there any accountants reading this that weee B/B+ math in HS? He’s doing well in his college math class now, much better than he did in HS. I hope he has a change of heart but I know the accounting freshman majors are already in certain classes so he’d have to catch up if he does choose that path. Not sure of what concentration he’ll choose.
Only elementary school level math skills are needed to major in accounting/become a CPA.
-1
Try passing the CPA exam and get back to us.
lol:
Are you joking ? Way beyond your imaginary world.
Repeat: Only elementary math skills needed to pass CPA exams.
You're neither a CPA nor have any accounting skills. Got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wonder why so few people consider accounting as a major and focus only on CS, etc.
Its a great field.. lots of jobs and tremendous location mobility...
Many find accounting boring--excruciatingly boring.
Many accountants feel that a career in auditing/assurance is stifling.
There are SO many job paths for accounting majors beyond audit/assurance! It is such a shame people think majoring in accounting, or even being an "accountant" by job title = box checking.
I'm interested in learning more. Can you say a bit more?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Majoring in accounting was probably the best thing I've ever done for my career! I'm not a CPA, and besides a tax internship I did when I was 21, I've never held the title of "accountant." It's a very flexible major that prepares you for a range of jobs/fields.
Do you use your accounting knowledge & accounting degree in your current job ?
Lots of tax attorneys--including many who work for Big Four accounting firms--have never taken any accounting courses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wonder why so few people consider accounting as a major and focus only on CS, etc.
Its a great field.. lots of jobs and tremendous location mobility...
Many find accounting boring--excruciatingly boring.
Many accountants feel that a career in auditing/assurance is stifling.
There are SO many job paths for accounting majors beyond audit/assurance! It is such a shame people think majoring in accounting, or even being an "accountant" by job title = box checking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Accounting pays well and there are lots of jobs but it is so boring.
Disagree on "boring." Maybe bookkeepers/non CPA jobs are boring, but my husband definitely enjoys his corporate clients very much. He is an auditor by training. "Accounting" is more than taxes.
Anonymous wrote:Accounting is a great major. Lots of job prospects. Let it go!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a freshman college student majoring in business. I wish he’d consider accounting and I’ve “gently” suggested it but his answer is that he’s not wonderful in math. Are there any accountants reading this that weee B/B+ math in HS? He’s doing well in his college math class now, much better than he did in HS. I hope he has a change of heart but I know the accounting freshman majors are already in certain classes so he’d have to catch up if he does choose that path. Not sure of what concentration he’ll choose.
Only elementary school level math skills are needed to major in accounting/become a CPA.
-1
Try passing the CPA exam and get back to us.
Are you joking ? Way beyond your imaginary world.
Repeat: Only elementary math skills needed to pass CPA exams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a freshman college student majoring in business. I wish he’d consider accounting and I’ve “gently” suggested it but his answer is that he’s not wonderful in math. Are there any accountants reading this that weee B/B+ math in HS? He’s doing well in his college math class now, much better than he did in HS. I hope he has a change of heart but I know the accounting freshman majors are already in certain classes so he’d have to catch up if he does choose that path. Not sure of what concentration he’ll choose.
Only elementary school level math skills are needed to major in accounting/become a CPA.
-1
Try passing the CPA exam and get back to us.
Are you joking ? Way beyond your imaginary world.
Repeat: Only elementary math skills needed to pass CPA exams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a freshman college student majoring in business. I wish he’d consider accounting and I’ve “gently” suggested it but his answer is that he’s not wonderful in math. Are there any accountants reading this that weee B/B+ math in HS? He’s doing well in his college math class now, much better than he did in HS. I hope he has a change of heart but I know the accounting freshman majors are already in certain classes so he’d have to catch up if he does choose that path. Not sure of what concentration he’ll choose.
Only elementary school level math skills are needed to major in accounting/become a CPA.
-1
Try passing the CPA exam and get back to us.
Anonymous wrote:any recommendation for good colleges for accounting major? Does name recognition matter for internships/jobs? DD is somewhat interested but we are not very familiar with the field, being more geared toward healthcare. Thank you
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a freshman college student majoring in business. I wish he’d consider accounting and I’ve “gently” suggested it but his answer is that he’s not wonderful in math. Are there any accountants reading this that weee B/B+ math in HS? He’s doing well in his college math class now, much better than he did in HS. I hope he has a change of heart but I know the accounting freshman majors are already in certain classes so he’d have to catch up if he does choose that path. Not sure of what concentration he’ll choose.
I'm a CPA from another country and have been a CFO/CAO at multiple companies before coming to the US. Kick myself for leaving that domain and moving over to IT. Fundamentally, accounting is about arithmetic. You are not going to be using geometry, algebra or calculus. You need to know how a business event translates into two of four things - Revenue, Expense, Asset or Liability. That's it, and even that is done by software these days. On top of this are wrappers of regulations, rules, standards and best practices which kinda color those numbers and you need to be aware of those. You also have to deal with different types of accounting - financial, management accounting, etc. and US tax laws are very nit-picky and you need to master those. Does get mundane but once you get the hang of it, it's mostly repetitive work and your value increases with experience. The CPA is a great moat and barrier to entry unlike, say, programming in Python.
Anonymous wrote:My son is a freshman college student majoring in business. I wish he’d consider accounting and I’ve “gently” suggested it but his answer is that he’s not wonderful in math. Are there any accountants reading this that weee B/B+ math in HS? He’s doing well in his college math class now, much better than he did in HS. I hope he has a change of heart but I know the accounting freshman majors are already in certain classes so he’d have to catch up if he does choose that path. Not sure of what concentration he’ll choose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a freshman college student majoring in business. I wish he’d consider accounting and I’ve “gently” suggested it but his answer is that he’s not wonderful in math. Are there any accountants reading this that weee B/B+ math in HS? He’s doing well in his college math class now, much better than he did in HS. I hope he has a change of heart but I know the accounting freshman majors are already in certain classes so he’d have to catch up if he does choose that path. Not sure of what concentration he’ll choose.
Only elementary school level math skills are needed to major in accounting/become a CPA.
This is mostly true, the actual math is not hard. However, if the problem is that he doesn’t have very good number sense that could be a problem.