Lectures and group discussions.
- Professional standards, ethics and legal liability.
- Audit objectives, evidence, procedures and documentation.
- Planning, materiality and risk.
- Internal control.
- Audit sampling.
- Computer auditing.
- Revenue and collection cycle and acquisition and expenditure cycle.
- Inventory and capital asset balances, production and payroll cycle, and finance and investment cycle.
- Investments, long term debt and shareholders’ equity balances, and completion of the audit.
At the end of the course, the successful student should be able to:
- Discuss the environmental context and issues relating to the attest function;
- Plan an audit taking into account concepts of evidence, risk and materiality;
- Evaluate internal controls;
- Understand sampling techniques and auditing in a computer environment;
- Discuss and perform audit procedures as and when appropriate.
Assignments/projects/cases/tests | 30% |
Midterm examination | 35% |
Final examination | 35% |
100% |
STUDENTS MUST WRITE BOTH THE MIDTERM EXAMINATION AND THE FINAL EXAMINATION TO OBTAIN CREDIT FOR THE COURSE.
Textbooks and Materials to be Purchased by Students
Robertson & Smieliauskas, Auditing: An International Approach, latest Canadian edition. McGraw-Hill Ryerson, Toronto, or other textbooks as approved by the accounting department.
Instructor compiled materials (if applicable).
Faculty of Commerce and Business Administration approved calculators
ACCT 3310 with a grade of C or better AND ACCT 3410 with a grade of C or better AND (BUSN 2429 with a grade of C or better OR BUSN 3431 with a grade of C or better)
OR ACCT 3310 with a grade of C or better AND currently active in the PDD Accounting or PDD Accounting Studies or PBD Accounting or PBD Accounting & Finance