Description
In this course, you will learn
- analyzing transactions,
- recording the effects,
- summarizing the effects, and
- preparing financial reports.
- journal entry—debits and credits—and
- the essential questions a bookkeeper/accountant asks in reviewing those transactions.
Syllabus:
- Introduction
- Introduction to bookkeeping
- The language of business
- How can we collect all this information?
- What you should know
1. Review of the Financial Statements
- Introducing financial statements
- The balance sheet
- The income statement
- The statement of cash flows
2. Fours Steps in the Bookkeeping Process
- The importance of routine bookkeeping
- Analyzing transactions
- The accounting equation
- Using accounts to categorize transactions
- Debits and credits
- Examples of accounts to categorize transactions
- Including revenues, expenses, and dividends
- Words of caution
3. How Transactions Affect the Accounting Equation
- Everything is recorded with debits and credits
- How do we record the effect of a transaction?
- Obtaining financing and buying equipment
- Buying supplies and inventory
- Providing services
- Selling inventory and providing services
- Incurring additional expenses
- Paying interest and dividends
- A note on journal entries
4. The General Ledger
- The accuracy of debits and credits in the days of real ‘books’
- Posting journal entries to accounts
5. Illustration of the First Three Steps in the Accounting Cycle
- Strangers and the power of financial statements
- Analyzing transactions
- Computing account balances
- The financial statements
- Conclusion
- Who uses financial statements?
- The role of computers
- Where we have been and what is next