Advanced Bookkeeping Techniques
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Jim Stice and Earl Stice
1:39:52
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001 Advancing your bookkeeping skills.mp4
01:01
001 Two things to remember for debits and credits.mp4
03:03
002 Journal entries Receiving financing from owners and lenders.mp4
04:46
003 Journal entries Buying assets and repaying loans.mp4
04:11
004 Journal entries Recording revenues and expenses.mp4
04:46
001 Accrual accounting Net income vs. cash flow.mp4
02:44
002 Fix the balance sheet then fix the income statement.mp4
03:27
003 Recording the paying for and then use of prepaid expenses.mp4
04:06
004 Recording the receipt of and earning of unearned revenue.mp4
04:24
001 The matching principle.mp4
03:45
002 Recording expenses with liabilities that slowly build up.mp4
04:19
003 Recording revenue with assets that slowly build up.mp4
04:48
004 End-of-period estimates such as depreciation and bad debts.mp4
04:59
001 What are retained earnings .mp4
03:54
002 The difference between a real and a nominal account.mp4
03:39
003 Updating retained earnings and resetting nominal accounts.mp4
03:29
004 Practice with the debits and credits of closing entries.mp4
03:20
001 The important raw data in the trial balance.mp4
03:45
002 Posting the journal entries to the ledger accounts.mp4
03:58
003 Creating a trial balance.mp4
03:30
004 Using a trial balance to prepare a balance sheet.mp4
02:44
001 Accounting restatements The case of Groupon.mp4
04:25
002 Error correction Recording something in the wrong account.mp4
03:40
003 Error correction Increasing or decreasing the amount.mp4
04:39
004 Error correction Fixing an error made last year.mp4
04:16
001 The role of external auditors in the accounting cycle.mp4
04:14
Description
Managing a company’s financial records entails a lot more than keeping track of money coming in and going out. Put one revenue stream in the wrong column, and you could grossly misrepresent your company’s financial health. In this course, accounting professors Jim Stice and Kay Stice dive deep into the accounting strategies behind more complex, higher-level bookkeeping practices. They cover topics such as adjusting entries, strategies for dealing with bookkeeping mistakes, closing entries, and making auditing of books easier.
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Jim Stice and Earl Stice
Instructor's CoursesI am the Distinguished Teaching Professor in the Marriott School of Management at Brigham Young University. I have served as an Associate Dean of the Marriott School. I also served for eight years as the director of BYU's MBA Program.
I hold bachelor's and master's degrees in accounting from BYU and a PhD in accounting from the University of Washington. I have been on the faculty at BYU since 1988.
During my time at BYU, I have been selected by graduating accounting students as “Teacher of the Year” on numerous occasions; I was selected by my peers in the Marriott School at BYU to receive the “Outstanding Teaching Award,” and I was selected by the University to receive its highest teaching award, the Maeser Excellence in Teaching Award. I have taught in academic and executive education programs in the United States, Europe, South Africa, Singapore, and China for such companies as IBM, Bank of America, and Ernst & Young.
I have published articles in the Journal of Accounting Research, The Accounting Review, Decision Sciences, Issues in Accounting Education, The CPA Journal, and other academic and professional journals.
In addition to teaching and research, I have served on the board of directors of a publicly-traded company that was taken private and on the Audit Committee for Deseret Management Corporation.
I have been writing accounting textbooks since 1990. I am co-author of Intermediate Accounting, 19th edition; Accounting: Concepts and Applications, 11th edition; and Financial Accounting: Reporting and Analysis, 7th Edition. I am now the co-creator (with my brother Kay and with our colleague Steve Albrecht) of online textbooks for Financial and Managerial Accounting courses at MyEducator.com.
My brother Kay and I have been teaching accounting for decades. Together we have over 70 years of experience in the classroom. We are passionate about teaching accounting and are grateful for the opportunity afforded us on LinkedIn Learning to share our passion with others.

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- language english
- Training sessions 26
- duration 1:39:52
- Release Date 2024/09/18