Major/Minor
The accounting major provides a series of courses
to prepare the student for a career in the field of
accounting.
Major Requirements
Accounting 101, 102, 210, 310, 315, 320, 325, 420, 430;
Business Administration 220, 240, 250, 335, 345, 350;
Economics 190, 191, 260;
It is strongly recommended that accounting majors take
Mathematics 170 and English 336.
The satisfactory/fail grade option may be used for only
one repeated course required for the major.
A minimum of one half of the courses in the major
field must be completed at Dominican. The State of
Illinois requires that an individual must have 150
semester hours of college credit to sit for the Certified
Public Accounting examination. Any student who is
planning to sit for the CPA exam may want to consider
enrolling in the combined BS/MBA program to meet the
150 semester hour requirement. Majors in accounting
will earn the Bachelor of Science degree.
Minor Requirements
Four courses in accounting selected from those required
for the accounting major and two additional courses
from other departments selected from those listed under
major requirements. The satisfactory/fail grade option
may be used in only one repeated course required for
the minor. A minimum of one half of the courses in the
minor field must be completed at Dominican.
COURSES
101. PRINCIPLES OF ACCOUNTING I (3)
Introduction to financial accounting concepts and
problems with emphasis on the accounting cycle; current
assets; property, plant, and equipment; intangibles; and
current liabilities.
102. PRINCIPLES OF ACCOUNTING II (3)
Continuation of Accounting 101. Completion of the
introduction into the area of financial accounting.
Introduction to managerial accounting concepts
and problems. Prerequisite: Accounting 101
210. COST ACCOUNTING (3)
Basic fundamentals in the area of cost. Use and
measurement of accounting costs in managerial decision
making. Prerequisites: Accounting 102, Computer Information
Systems 120, Economics 260
310. INTERMEDIATE ACCOUNTING I (3)
A study of accounting principles as they relate to cash,
receivables inventory, property, plant and equipment,
intangibles, current liabilities, long-term liabilities and
stockholders’ equity. Prerequisites: Accounting 102, Computer Information
Systems 120
315. INTERMEDIATE ACCOUNTING II (3)
A continuation of the study of accounting principles
begun in Accounting 310 as they relate to earnings per
share, investments, revenue recognition, income taxes,
pensions, leases, accounting changes, statement of cash
flows, interim reporting and segmental reporting. Prerequisite: Accounting 310
320. TAXES I (3)
A study of the basic provisions of federal income
tax legislation as they relate to the taxation of
individuals. Topics include gross income, exclusions,
deductions,exemptions, credits and property transactions. Prerequisite: Accounting 101
325. TAXES II (3)
A study of the basic provisions of federal income tax
legislation as they relate to the formation, operations
and distributions of corporations and partnerships, to
specially taxed corporations, to the gift and estate tax and
to the taxation of estates and trusts. Prerequisite: Accounting 320
420. ADVANCED ACCOUNTING (3)
A study of accounting principles as they relate
to consolidations, foreign currency translation,
partnerships, state and local governments and nonprofit
organizations. Prerequisite: Accounting 315
ACCOUNTING 35
430. AUDITING (3)
A study of financial audits by public accountants and the
resulting audit reports. Emphasis on auditing standards
and procedures, sampling techniques, professional ethics
and the legal environment. Prerequisite: Accounting 315
450. INDEPENDENT STUDY (1-3)
Open to juniors and seniors majoring in accounting.
455. INTERNSHIP (1-8)
Training in a business organization for a designated
number of hours a week under the supervision of a
college faculty member and the manager of the business.
Exposure to various aspects of business, finance and
accounting. Open to junior and senior majors.
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