Students today see little relevance in learning double-entry bookkeeping and find it difficult to learn how to prepare journal entries correctly. In particular, they struggle with the first stage of the double-entry process: identifying which accounts are to be debited and which are to be credited for each transaction. This paper reports on an attempt to overcome this situation by using the first printed instructional text on the subject (Pacioli, 1494) as the principal textbook on a 20-hour component of the introductory financial accounting course in an undergraduate accounting degree program. Instruction followed the pedagogy presented by Pacioli and only minimal additional costs to faculty were incurred. The innovation was successful....
This paper investigates why, in 1494, the Franciscan friar and teacher of mathematics, Luca Pacioli,...
This submission represents a journey of learning about learning within accounting education, and, in...
This treatise takes a fresh (and somewhat contrarian) look at the long history of accounting lead-in...
Students today see little relevance in learning double-entry bookkeeping and find it difficult to le...
Double entry bookkeeping is generally considered to be a topic that students struggle to learn. In p...
Historians of the origins of modern accounting have generally accepted that the earliest known instr...
There is much we do not know about the early development of double entry bookkeeping. What, for exam...
In 2006, the Teaching and Curriculum Section of the American Accounting Association published a mono...
Historians of the origins of modern accounting have generally accepted that the earliest known instr...
There is much we do not know about the early development of double entry bookkeeping. What, for exam...
What we know today as double entry bookkeeping is traceable to a man called Luca Pacioli, the author...
Luca Pacioli, was a Franciscan friar born in Borgo San Sepolcro in what is now Northern Italy in 144...
It has long been argued that double-entry bookkeeping (‘DEB’) was important for enabling capitalism’...
There is much we do not know about the early development of double entry bookkeeping. What, for exam...
Our research contains unashamedly speculations about Pacioli, and his Renaissance heroes. It seeks t...
This paper investigates why, in 1494, the Franciscan friar and teacher of mathematics, Luca Pacioli,...
This submission represents a journey of learning about learning within accounting education, and, in...
This treatise takes a fresh (and somewhat contrarian) look at the long history of accounting lead-in...
Students today see little relevance in learning double-entry bookkeeping and find it difficult to le...
Double entry bookkeeping is generally considered to be a topic that students struggle to learn. In p...
Historians of the origins of modern accounting have generally accepted that the earliest known instr...
There is much we do not know about the early development of double entry bookkeeping. What, for exam...
In 2006, the Teaching and Curriculum Section of the American Accounting Association published a mono...
Historians of the origins of modern accounting have generally accepted that the earliest known instr...
There is much we do not know about the early development of double entry bookkeeping. What, for exam...
What we know today as double entry bookkeeping is traceable to a man called Luca Pacioli, the author...
Luca Pacioli, was a Franciscan friar born in Borgo San Sepolcro in what is now Northern Italy in 144...
It has long been argued that double-entry bookkeeping (‘DEB’) was important for enabling capitalism’...
There is much we do not know about the early development of double entry bookkeeping. What, for exam...
Our research contains unashamedly speculations about Pacioli, and his Renaissance heroes. It seeks t...
This paper investigates why, in 1494, the Franciscan friar and teacher of mathematics, Luca Pacioli,...
This submission represents a journey of learning about learning within accounting education, and, in...
This treatise takes a fresh (and somewhat contrarian) look at the long history of accounting lead-in...