1st Edition

Communication in Accounting Education

    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    Accounting, often described as "the language of business", requires a diverse set of written, listening and oral communication skills if those who practise it are to be effective. Given the pace of change relating to, for example, the evolution of international accounting standards and the demands for greater transparency, accountants must be clear, responsive, and audience-focussed communicators.

    Employers of accountants consistently comment on the need for their new graduate recruits and trainees to have strong written, oral, and interpersonal communication skills. In this light, accounting educators face the challenge of designing and delivering programmes that reflect professional expectations on the part of employers and clients, and educating students on how to make informed communication choices in order to achieve desired results and to build good working relationships.

    The chapters in this book deal with such topics as accounting students’ perceptions of oral communication skills; competence-based writing skills; and the development of listening skills.

    This book is derived from articles originally published in Accounting Education: an international journal.

    1. Communication in Accounting Education F. Elizabeth Gray and Lynn Hamilton

    2. The Communication Skills of Accountants: What we Know and the Gaps in our Knowledge Harshini P. Siriwardane and Chris H. Durden

    3. ‘Lights, Camera, Action!’ Video Technology and Students’ Perceptions of Oral Communication in Accounting Education Craig Cameron and Jennifer Dickfos

    4. A Business Communication Module for an MBA Managerial Accounting Course: A Teaching Note David E. Stout

    5. Effects of Interspersed versus Summary Feedback on the Quality of Students’ Case Report Revisions Fred Phillips and Susan Wolcott

    6. A Successful Competency-Based Writing Skills Development Programme: Results of an Experiment Russell J. Craig and C. Nicholas McKinney

    7. ‘A distinguishing factor’: Oral Communication Skills in New Accountancy Graduates F. Elizabeth Gray and Niki Murray

    8. A Qualitative Exploration of Oral Communication Apprehension Marann Byrne, Barbara Flood, and Dan Shanahan

    9. Developing Accounting Students’ Listening Skills: Barriers, Opportunitie and an Integrated Stakeholder Approach Gerard Stone, Margaret Lightbody, and Rob Whait

    10. Accounting Students in an Australian University Improve their Writing: But How Did it Happen? Gillian Dale-Jones, Phil Hancock, and Keith Willey

    Biography

    Richard M S Wilson has been active internationally in educational policy-making on the interface of accounting education and training for more than 40 years; has worked as an accounting educator in more than a dozen countries; has published widely; is the founding editor of Accounting Education: an international journal; and holds two Lifetime Achievement Awards (one specifically for his work in the field of accounting education).

    F. Elizabeth Gray is Associate Head of Massey University’s School of Communication, Journalism, and Marketing, New Zealand, where she teaches courses in professional writing, editing and publishing. She has ongoing research interests in written and oral communication demand in scientific and business workplaces, as well as in the fields of nineteenth-century journalism.

    Lynn Hamilton is Associate Professor and Director of Management Communication Programs at the McIntire School of Commerce, University of Virginia, U.S.A. She teaches managerial writing, communication strategy, oral presentation skills, media relations, and crisis communication. She has a particular interest in organizational and professional storytelling.