This study examined non-traditional undergraduate student’s perception of accounting in an introductory accounting course at five campuses of a Christian university in the southeast region of the U. S. The consensuses of the student’s perceptions were positive over the perceptional items measured. However, three of the items FORWARD(I am looking forward this course), DIFFICULT (This course will be difficult), and INSTRUCTOR (The instructor will affect my opinion of the usefulness of this course) indicated a change between the groups. In the pre-survey response, non-traditional students perceived FORWARD and INSTRUCTOR higher than traditional students while both groups have an almost identical mean response for DIFFICULT. However, at ...
Problem. The traditional accounting pedagogy that served the industrial era effectively is losing it...
This thesis proposes and evaluates a new integrated model of accounting career choice (ACC), drawing...
This study is concerned with students' and lecturer's experiences of learning and teaching introduct...
This paper contributes to the continuing debate regarding the curriculum for the first undergraduate...
The study explores two research questions: Q1, What teaching methods do four-year accounting faculty...
This study is concerned with the non-specialist accounting and finance students’ perspective on the ...
The research paper is concerned with a new teaching method consisting of real-life case study that i...
ABSTRACT This research is conducted to identify the differences of perception towards accountant pro...
Traditionally, undergraduate accounting courses are lecture-centred and therefore limit the opportun...
Few studies have examined the empirical question of whether nontraditional students are different th...
This paper assesses accounting and non-accounting majors ’ perceptions of their accounting knowledge...
This study investigates perceptions of the work of accountant:! held by first-year accounting studen...
This paper replicates Malgwi\u27s 2006 article Discerning accounting and non-accounting students\u27...
This paper reports experiences of non-traditional students in a specially designed section of semina...
A central recurring theme in business education is the optimal strategy for improving introductory a...
Problem. The traditional accounting pedagogy that served the industrial era effectively is losing it...
This thesis proposes and evaluates a new integrated model of accounting career choice (ACC), drawing...
This study is concerned with students' and lecturer's experiences of learning and teaching introduct...
This paper contributes to the continuing debate regarding the curriculum for the first undergraduate...
The study explores two research questions: Q1, What teaching methods do four-year accounting faculty...
This study is concerned with the non-specialist accounting and finance students’ perspective on the ...
The research paper is concerned with a new teaching method consisting of real-life case study that i...
ABSTRACT This research is conducted to identify the differences of perception towards accountant pro...
Traditionally, undergraduate accounting courses are lecture-centred and therefore limit the opportun...
Few studies have examined the empirical question of whether nontraditional students are different th...
This paper assesses accounting and non-accounting majors ’ perceptions of their accounting knowledge...
This study investigates perceptions of the work of accountant:! held by first-year accounting studen...
This paper replicates Malgwi\u27s 2006 article Discerning accounting and non-accounting students\u27...
This paper reports experiences of non-traditional students in a specially designed section of semina...
A central recurring theme in business education is the optimal strategy for improving introductory a...
Problem. The traditional accounting pedagogy that served the industrial era effectively is losing it...
This thesis proposes and evaluates a new integrated model of accounting career choice (ACC), drawing...
This study is concerned with students' and lecturer's experiences of learning and teaching introduct...