Chartered professional accountant's competencies: the synergy between accounting education and employers' needs—evidence from Alberta

IF 1.9 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Higher Education Skills and Work-based Learning Pub Date : 2023-04-06 DOI:10.1108/heswbl-09-2022-0183
Sherif Elbarrad, W. Belassi
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Abstract

PurposeThis study examines the competencies delineated by the Chartered Professional Accountants (CPA) in Canada and explores the gap between what universities provide, represented by the students' confidence in the knowledge acquired—and what the accounting profession in Canada requires and deems necessary.Design/methodology/approachUsing the 44 sub-competencies listed under the main seven competencies set by CPA, a pair of questionnaires were drafted. The first questionnaire asked post-secondary accounting students to rate their perceived confidence in these 44 sub-competencies and received 105 responses. The second questionnaire asked accounting professionals to rate the frequency and degree of use of each sub-competency in their workplace and received 72 responses. The responses to the two questionnaires were used to compare perceived student competencies with industry expectations.FindingsThe study suggests an industry-neutral framework that employers and post-secondary institutions (PSIs) can use to determine where knowledge gaps exist between students' qualifications and professionals' requirements. The paper concludes that while there are synergies in many competencies in the accounting field in Canada, there are also areas of discord.Research limitations/implicationsThe study relies on one accredited PSI. Relying on one case study limits the ability to generalize the findings. Nevertheless, the in-depth nature of the study allows it to shed light on many key issues related to accounting education and the profession in Alberta, Canada.Originality/valueThis paper adds to the existing literature by exploring the gap between what students learn and what the profession needs in the accounting field in Canada. Studying Canada adds to the accounting knowledge and draws attention to gaps that could exist in other countries. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first paper to focus on Canada from this perspective. The paper also proposes a curriculum development model that is based on market needs and applicable to all fields of knowledge.
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特许专业会计师的能力:会计教育与雇主需求之间的协同作用——来自阿尔伯塔省的证据
目的本研究考察了加拿大特许专业会计师(CPA)所描述的能力,并探讨了大学所提供的(以学生对所学知识的信心为代表)与加拿大会计专业所要求和认为必要的之间的差距。设计/方法/方法使用注册会计师设定的主要七项能力中列出的44个子能力,起草了两份问卷。第一份问卷要求中学后会计专业的学生对他们对这44个子能力的信心进行评分,共收到105份回复。第二份问卷要求会计专业人员对其工作场所使用每种次级能力的频率和程度进行评分,共收到72份回复。对两份问卷的回答被用来比较学生的感知能力和行业期望。研究结果该研究提出了一个行业中立的框架,雇主和高等教育机构可以使用该框架来确定学生资格和专业人员要求之间存在的知识差距。该文件的结论是,虽然加拿大会计领域的许多能力存在协同作用,但也存在不一致的地方。研究局限性/含义该研究依赖于一个经认可的PSI。依赖于一个案例研究限制了概括研究结果的能力。尽管如此,这项研究的深入性使它能够揭示与加拿大阿尔伯塔省会计教育和职业相关的许多关键问题。原始性/价值本文通过探索加拿大会计领域学生所学知识与职业需求之间的差距,补充了现有文献。学习加拿大增加了会计知识,并引起了人们对其他国家可能存在的差距的关注。据作者所知,这是第一篇从这个角度关注加拿大的论文。本文还提出了一种基于市场需求、适用于所有知识领域的课程开发模式。
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来源期刊
Higher Education Skills and Work-based Learning
Higher Education Skills and Work-based Learning EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
36
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