Authors: Nancy A. Bagranoff DBA
ISBN-13: 9780470507025, ISBN-10: 0470507020
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
Date Published: November 2009
Edition: 11st Edition
Nancy A. Bagranoff received her A.A. degree from Briarcliff College, B.S. degree from Ohio State University, and M.S. degree in accounting from Syracuse University. Her DBA degree was conferred by George Washington University in 1986 (accounting major and information systems minor). From 1973 to 1976, she was employed by General Electric in Syracuse, New York, where she completed the company's Financial Management Training Program. Dr. Bagranoff passed the CPA examination in the District of Columbia in 1982. She spent fall 1995 as faculty in residence at Arthur Andersen where she worked for the Business Systems Consulting and Computer Risk Management groups. Professor Bagranoff has published several articles in such journals as Journal of Information Systems, Journal of Accounting Literature, Computers and Accounting, The Journal of Accounting Education, Behavioral Research in Accounting, Journal of Accountancy, and The Journal of Accounting and EDP. Dr. Bagranoff is also co-author of Core Concepts of Consulting for Accountants and Core Concepts of IT Auditing. She is currently professor of accounting and the dean of the College of Business and Public Administration at Old Dominion University. She was formerly president of the Information Systems section and is currently vice president-education of he American Accounting Association.
Mark G. Simkin received his A.B. degree from Brandeis University and his MBA and Ph.D. degrees from the Graduate School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley. Before assuming his present position of professor in the Department of Accounting and Information Systems, University of Nevada, Professor Simkin taught in the Department of Decision Sciences at the University of Hawaii. He also taught at California State University, Hayward, and the Japan America Institute of Decision Sciences, Honolulu; worked as a research analyst at the Institute of Business and Economic Research at the University of California, Berkeley; programmed computers at IBM's Industrial Development-Finance Headquarters in White Plains, New York; and acted as a computer consultant to business companies in California, Hawaii, and Nevada. Dr. Simkin is the author of more than 100 articles that have been published in such journals as Decision Sciences, JASA, The Journal of Accountancy, Communications of the ACM, Interfaces, The Review of Business and Economic Research, and the Journal of Bank Research. He has also authored several textbooks in the information systems area, including Applications Programming in Visual Basic 5 (Scott/Jones, 1998).
Carolyn Strand Norman received her B.S. and M.S.I.A degrees from Purdue University, and her Ph.D. from Texas A&M University. Dr. Norman is a Certified Public Accountant, licensed in Virginia. She is a retired Lieutenant Colonel who was a management analyst with the United States Air Force. At the Pentagon, she developed compensation and entitlements legislation working frequently with House and Senate staffers. Prior to assuming her current position, Dr. Norman taught at Seattle Pacific University where she co-authored the book, XBRL Essentials with Charles Hoffman, and was selected as Scholar of the Year for the School of Business sand Economics. Dr. Norman has published more than 35 articles in such journals as Behavioral Research in Accounting, Journal of Accounting and Public Policy, Journal of Information Systems, Advance sin Accounting Behavioral Research, Issues in Accounting Education, Journal of Accounting Education, and Research in Government and Nonprofit Accounting.
Offering concise, user-friendly coverage of core topics, this essential text provides a strong foundation for courses in Accounting Information Systems and gives instructors the flexibility they need to meet their individual course objectives. This text - now with more color! - is an excellent, stand-alone resource for a shorter course in accounting information systems, or the prefect foundation textbook for a longer class in which other materials are integrated - such as computer projects, casebooks, and readings.
Newly updated and revised, this Tenth Edition has been reorganized to strengthen its flexibility as well as redesigned to promote its flexibility as well as redesigned to promote its accessibility. The reorganized chapter order moves coverage of databases to the end, which better allows for coverage at any point during the course. It also reduces systems chapters from three to one, s this material is often covered in other courses.
New in the Tenth Edition
Pt. 1 | An Introduction to Accounting Information Systems | 1 |
Ch. 1 | Accounting Information Systems and the Accountant | 3 |
Ch. 2 | The Technology of Accounting Information Systems | 30 |
Ch. 3 | Documenting Accounting Information Systems | 63 |
Pt. 2 | Accounting Information Systems for Collecting, Recording, and Storing Business Data | 99 |
Ch. 4 | Transaction Processing: Fundamentals and Major Processing Cycles | 101 |
Ch. 5 | Transaction Processing: Additional Cycles, Special Industries, and Accounting Software | 138 |
Ch. 6 | Databases and Data Modeling | 172 |
Pt. 3 | Controls and Security in Accounting Information Systems | 207 |
Ch. 7 | Introduction to Internal Control Systems | 209 |
Ch. 8 | Controls for Computerized Accounting Information Systems | 241 |
Ch. 9 | Computer Crime and Ethics | 279 |
Ch. 10 | Auditing Computerized Accounting Information Systems | 312 |
Pt. 4 | Developing Effective Accounting Information Systems | 343 |
Ch. 11 | Systems Study: Planning and Analysis | 345 |
Ch. 12 | Systems Study: System Design | 372 |
Ch. 13 | Systems Study: Implementation and Maintenance | 401 |
Pt. 5 | Special Topics in Accounting Information Systems | 435 |
Ch. 14 | Information and Knowledge Processing Systems in Accounting | 437 |
Ch. 15 | Electronic Commerce and the Internet | 471 |
Index | 497 |