In 1984 the
American Accounting Association's Executive Committee
appointed a committee of individuals from various
backgrounds with an interest in the future structure,
content and scope of accounting education.
The committee
studied the features of the expanding accounting
profession and the current state of accounting education.
The committee's analysis indicates that accounting
education as it is currently approached requires major
reorientation between now and the year 2000. The
committee's recommendations are intended to serve as
broad guidelines and to provide direction for those who
initiate changes in accounting education.
The committee
recommends that colleges and universities (1) approach
accounting education as an information development and
distribution function for economic decision making and
(2) emphasize students' learning to learn as the primary
classroom objective. The committee's report includes 28
recommendations. Ten recommendations on the future scope,
content and structure of accounting education address the
most comprehensive concern of the committee, i.e., that
the foundation for a broad education should be obtained
from an accountant's collegiate education. Other
recommendations are associated with the teaching process,
faculty responsibilities, administration, accreditation,
professional examination, and economics of accounting
education.
The committee
suggests a three-phase implementation process to the
academic and practitioner communities by the year
2000.