A STUDY GUIDE FOR ACCOUNTING STUDENTS
Author Anonymous
Check your study habits against these suggestions. There is no substitute for HARD WORK or for a DESIRE TO LEARN in studying accounting, but most of us could use our study time and our classroom period more efficiently. There are some techniques that enable us to better exhibit our ability on exams and receive sbetter grades. See if you can use these suggestions to get maximum results for your study efforts.
Studying the Textbook
1. Studying accounting is not like reading fiction or even studying history, mathematics, or economics.
2. Read to understand "why."
3. Work PROBLEMS to understand "how."
4. Remember "why" and "how."
(1) Go back to previous chapters and bring yourself up to date. See how this chapter builds on the last one.
(2) If possible, rework one problem each week from some previous chapter. Rework problems that were difficult for you.
5. Relate the things we talk about in accounting to things that you already know--places you have worked, your parent's business, other courses. Try to see how this might help you do what you want to do in the future. See if you can use it right now--as a treasurer for campus organizations, in part-time jobs, in a personal bookkeeping system.
6. If there is something you do not understand, prepare specific questions to ask your instructor. PINPOINT THE THING THAT YOU DO NOT UNDERSTAND. (Some students keep a notebook of points with which they have difficulty.)
Working Problems
1. (RTP) Read the problem. Read the instructions. Scan the problem to see what is ahead of you.
2. Work the problems without "page flipping" back to the chapter.
3. Be neat and orderly. Sloppy calculations, messy papers, and general carelessness cause most errors in the working of accounting problems.
4. Keep up with your class.
5. Note the part of the problem with which you have difficulty and ask questions during the classroom session.
Make the Best Use of Class Time
1. Classes are never interesting unless you take part.
2. Be prepared before you go to class.
3. Don't be afraid to ask questions.
4. Students who make failing grades also fail to attend classes, fail to do their homework, and fail to ask the instructor for help. Stay out of these ruts.
Preparing for Exams
1. Be specific in your study; concentrate on the things which seem to be most important. (Some students make up an exam of their own.)
2. Do not stop with just "getting the idea." Be sure that you can work problems without the aid of the book.
3. Every exam has an element of speed. Have your "hows" and "whys" right at your fingertips. If you are slow, you probably need more study.
4. Students are not parrots. On a good exam you should be expected to give back something more than what was in the textbook. A good exam should not be a carbon copy of a homework problem. It will probably approach the material covered from some different angle to test your ability to reason and understand, rather than your ability to memorize.
5. When taking exams, many points are lost because the student does not READ THE PROBLEM, is not neat and orderly (has poor form and makes errors in addition), or does not show calculations.
6. Examinations need not be a source of worry. Conscientious effort is seldom unrewarded.
Accounting Instructors' Report
(Used by permission)