Saturday, December 13, 2008

Century 21 Accounting or Exploring Requirements

Century 21 Accounting: Multicolumn Journal

Author: Claudia Bienias Gilbertson

No other accounting text takes you further or gives you more. With CENTURY 21 ACCOUNTING MULTICOLUMN JOURNAL, 9E you place the advantage of more than 100 years of accounting success into your students' hands with the latest from this authoritative leader in accounting education. Each advantage you find within CENTURY 21 ACCOUNTING MULTICOLUMN JOURNAL, 9E reflects guidance from a Teacher Review Board of more than 60 experienced educators, just like you, and input from a first-of-its-kind Student Advisory Board. This edition's fresh, clean presentation addresses your contemporary classroom needs as effectively today as this best-selling text did more than a century ago when it redefined the accounting course. CENTURY 21 ACCOUNTING MULTICOLUMN JOURNAL starts with the five-column multicolumn journal before moving into special journals in Part Two. This is the only text to offer you a choice in accounting presentation. The NINTH EDITION'S new student-driven design now integrates commercial technology into the end of every chapter and offers the market's first Online Working Papers, based on your requests. A unique focus on financial literacy and emphasis on character in this edition, as well as actual companies selected by students prepare your class for accounting challenges.Trust the book's unwavering accuracy to ensure a complete text, comprehensive package, and technology solutions with the advantage to move your course and your students ahead in today's times.



Table of Contents:
Part 1: ACCOUNTING FOR A SERVICE BUSINESS ORGANIZED AS A PROPRIETORSHIP. 1. Starting a Proprietorship: Changes that Affect the Accounting Equation. 2. Analyzing Transactions into Debit and Credit Parts. 3. Journalizing Transactions. 4. Posting to a General Ledger. 5. Cash Control Systems. Reinforcement Activity 1--Part A. 6. Work Sheet for a Service Business. 7. Financial Statements for a Proprietorship. 8. Recording Adjusting and Closing Entries for a Service Business. Reinforcement Activity 1--Part B. Simulation 1 Description. Part 2: ACCOUNTING FOR A MERCHANDISING BUSINESS ORGANIZED AS A CORPORATION. 9. Journalizing Purchases and Cash Payments. 10. Journalizing Sales and Cash Receipts Using Special Journals. 11. Posting to General and Subsidiary Ledgers. 12. Preparing Payroll Records. 13. Payroll Accounting, Taxes, and Reports. Reinforcement Activity 2--Part A. 14. Work Sheet for a Merchandising Business. 15. Financial Statements for a Corporation. 16. Recording Adjusting and Closing Entries for a Corporation. Reinforcement Activity 2--Part B. Simulation 2 Description. Part 3: ACCOUNTING FOR A MERCHANDISING BUSINESS ORGANIZED AS A CORPORATION--ADJUSTMENTS AND VALUATION. 17. Accounting for Uncollectible Accounts Receivable. 18. Accounting for Plant Assets and Depreciation. 19. Accounting for Inventory. 20. Accounting for Notes and Interest. Reinforcement Activity 3--Part A. 21. Accounting for Accrued Revenue and Expenses. 22. End-of-Fiscal-Period Work for a Corporation. Reinforcement Activity 3--Part B. Simulation #3 Description. Part 4: ADDITIONAL ACCOUNTING PROCEDURES. 23. Accounting for Partnerships. 24. Recording International and Internet Sales. App. A:Statement of Cash Flows. App. B: Best Buy's Annual Report. App. C: Accounting Concepts. App. D: Using a Calculator and Computer Keypad. App. E: Recycling Problems. App. F: Answers to Audit Your Understanding. Glossary.
Index.

Books about economics: Human Resource Management or Human Resource Development around the World

Exploring Requirements: Quality Before Design

Author: Donald C Gaus

Finally, here's an innovative book that gives you the understanding you need to give people the solutions they want.

The collaborative team of Gause and Weinberg tells how you can assure the requirements are right — before the product is designed.

Written by two authorities in the field, this book is a collection of ideas developed, refined, and tested during their more than sixty combined years of work with both large and small organizations.

The techniques formulated in Exploring Requirements are not merely theoretical; they have been used effectively to develop a wide range of products — from computer software to furniture, books, and buildings.

Systems analysts and anyone involved with the challenges of the requirements process will greatly benefit from this book.



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