| EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY |
PERIODIC FEEDBACK FROM
PRACTITIONERS to faculty about
the strengths and weaknesses of their
graduates and their program can help to
positively influence the accounting
profession. CPAs ALSO CAN INSPIRE
STUDENTS education by
providing internship opportunities for
accounting students, or serving as a
guest speaker in class.
MEMBERSHIP ON A
UNIVERSITYS ACCOUNTING
advisory council permits a CPA to
interact with faculty on a regular basis
and directly affect the accounting
curriculum.
SERVING AS A PROFESSOR
FOR A DAY is another way a
CPA can promote the profession to
accounting students and answer any
questions they have.
CPAs CAN SUPPORT
STUDENTS PROFESSIONAL development
by providing advice on proper business
attire and tips for preparing resumes,
and conducting mock interviews.
CPAs CAN SHARE EXPERIENCES with
a professor to cowrite an instructional
case study for a journal, which can reach
countless students in classrooms across
the world.
ORGANIZING OR CONTRIBUTING to
an accounting education fund at the
university can help fund a variety of
educational purposes, such as student
scholarships and travel expenses to
professional meetings.
PARTICIPATION BY
PRACTITIONERS in the education
of todays accounting students is a
win-win-win situation for students, CPAs
and faculty.
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| BONITA K. PETERSON KRAMER, CPA,
PhD, CMA, CIA, is a professor of
accounting at the Montana State
University College of Business in
Bozeman, and she can be reached at bonitap@montana.edu. CHRISTIE W. JOHNSON, CPA, and
GIL W. CRAIN, PhD, are associate
professors of accounting there. SCOTT J.
MILLER, CPA, is a partner at KPMG in
Anchorage, Alaska. His e-mail address is sjmiller@kpmg.com. |
ntry-level CPAs are expected to practically walk
on water. In addition to the technical ability to
do the job, they need communication and people
skills, computer savvy, a strong sense of
ethicsand even a nose that can detect
fraud. To guide them, they need a way to bridge
the worlds of academia and practice and gain a
much broader range of competencies than ever
before.
| CPAs can help
produce the best entry-level staffers of
the future by meeting with the accounting
faculty and providing feedback on the
curriculum. |
High-quality
entry-level accountants cannot be produced from a
handful of courses alone. At Montana State
University (MSU), Bozeman, a continuing
partnership between practitioners and professors
is an effective way to help future accounting
professionals down from the ivory tower into the
real world. For more than two decades the
accounting faculty has actively engaged
practitioners in the educational process. We have
developed an integrated, team-based program that
revolves around practitioner input and frequent
student and faculty interaction with
practitioners who are willing to share their
valuable expertise and insight. Drawing from our
own experiences, we suggest how practitioners can
become more involved in accounting education.
More Masters
The number of graduates
earning masters degrees in
accounting increased by 59% while the
number earning bachelors degrees
has held fairly steady.

Source: The
Supply of Accounting Graduates and the
Demand for Public Accounting
Recruits2004 (for Academic
Year 20022003) by Beatrice Sanders,
AICPA, www.aicpa.org/members/div/career/edu/sagdpar.htm.
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INFLUENCE THE CURRICULUM
One way for CPAs
to help produce the best entry-level staffers of
the future is to meet with the accounting faculty
and provide feedback on the curriculum. When CPAs
are on campus to interview our students, we meet
with them over a meal to exchange ideas and
discuss professional issues. We seek and receive
candid feedback about our program and our
graduates performance. We ask for feedback
on our individual course content and suggestions
for new courses. Most recently this led to our
adding a tax course that emphasizes service
learning and an introductory course in fraud
examination. Because many practitioners have
stressed the value of graduates passing the
CPA exam prior to employment, we also encourage
our students to sit for the exam immediately upon
graduation (see Student Voices).
| Student Voices By
completing the CPA exam prior to starting
my career, I was able to focus on my new
career and enjoy my new lifestyle. It
becomes increasingly difficult to pass
the CPA exam due to escalating workloads.
I know of several colleagues who either
jeopardized promotions or were denied one
because they hadnt passed the exam.
I also believe there was significant
value for my employer. Since I had
completed the exam, I did not have to
take CPA exam review courses, for which
my employer would have had to pay. I did
not have to study for the exam or attend
classes, which increased the flexibility
of my schedule to the employer.
Mark Sherman,
1997 MSU graduate and accounting manager,
revenue and risk, Plum Creek Timber Co.,
Columbia Falls, Mont.
Passing the CPA exam before
beginning my accounting career proved to
be very rewarding. Not only did it earn
me respect from future employers and
coworkers, but it also helped avoid the
daunting task of trying to study while
putting in 40+ hours of work each week.
It was definitely to my advantage to put
the time and effort into passing while
still in the education environment.
Carrie
Morasko, 2001 MSU graduate,
Great-West Life Healthcare Financial
Reporting,
Greenwood Village, Colo.
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We stay in
contact with alumni and practicing CPAs through
teaching CPE courses and serving on state CPA
society or other professional organization
committees. Through these relationships
weve been able to add new and more varied
internship opportunities for our students. Most
of our internships are out of state, requiring
the student to be away from campus for a
semester, but many students have an offer of
permanent employment in hand when they return.
INTO
THE CLASSROOM
We established an advisory
council with practitioners in the fall of 2004 so
CPAs can provide more formal feedback to faculty.
The council consists of a group of CPAs who have
a sincere interest in MSUs accounting
program (see MSU Accounting Advisory Council
Activities). It
includes 20 men and women in various stages of
their careers, representing national, regional
and local public accounting firms, private
industry and governmental accounting.
Serving as a classroom guest
speaker is another great way CPAs can share their
expertise, or reach an even wider audience of
students by volunteering to participate in any
campus speaker program. MSUs David B. Orser
Executive Speaker program brings in business
professionals with a record of achievement to
spend two days making presentations to the
public, the campus and individual classes. D.
Gerald Searfoss, PhD, professor and Deloitte
partner (retired) who is active in many prominent
professional organizations, and Jim Alderson, an
alumnus who was the whistleblower in the biggest
health care fraud case in history (Columbia/HCA
and Quorum Health), were two recent accounting
professionals who came to our campus for this
series.
While you are on campus, take
the time to meet with the accounting faculty to
discuss current events or curricular issues. MSU
recently was visited by a Deloitte partner from
Oregon who provided CPE on derivatives for our
faculty and an Ernst & Young partner from
Texas who spoke about due diligence services.
Arrange with the faculty to have the use of a
conference room or a spare office and be a
professor for a day, holding office
hours to meet informally with students and
faculty. During a recent semester, accounting
professionals from Kroger Co., Eide Bailly and
PricewaterhouseCoopers came to our campus, gave
classroom presentations and held office hours for
students to discuss career opportunities and
answer questions.
If its not practical for
you to spend time on campus, you still can
contribute by encouraging faculty to hand out
your business cards and inviting students to
contact you with questions. Or you can contribute
your real-world expertise by offering to write an
instructional case or a practitioner journal
article with a professor. Choose a faculty
coauthor whos an experienced writer and you
may only need to contribute your ideas and
provide input on emerging drafts.
GUIDE
THEM INTO THE WORKPLACE
Many students have
no experience interviewing for a professional
position. CPAs can help them by sharing
information on appropriate career attire and
business etiquette, providing tips on preparing
resumes and conducting mock interviews.
It helps if youre candid
with faculty about what you expect of job
applicants in terms of grades, experience and
extracurricular activities. Share your
organizations screening materials, such as
internal evaluation forms for candidates or
employees, to help faculty advise students about
the interviewing process or help students network
with your own former colleagues who have made
transitions into different career paths.
An ideal way to promote
awareness and build rapport with faculty is to
invite them to your office to meet your staff and
learn about your practice specialties. In return
they can teach you about themselves, their
backgrounds and research interests.
Schedule student field trips to
your office to provide them with a peek into the
professional world of accountingand
dont restrict your invitations to local
universities. We are located in a small Montana
town; in addition to visiting local firms, we
also take students by chartered bus to a larger
city and spend the day visiting a Big Four firm
in our state, other regional and statewide CPA
firms, and the internal audit division of a large
regional bank. The local chapter of CPAs hosts a
luncheon with a prominent guest speaker,
providing more opportunities for our students to
interact with accounting professionals.
CONTRIBUTE TIME AND MONEY
Support student
efforts by participating in their events, such as
volunteering to make a presentation at an
accounting club meeting or attending student
service activities. Members of the MSU chapter of
Beta Alpha Psi, the national accounting
fraternity, perform a great deal of community
service for charities such as the local food
bank, Habitat for Humanity and Special Olympics.
Practitioner participation is always welcome, and
offers the chance to get to know the students.
The issue of funding deserves
mention in these times of university budget cuts.
Consider organizing or contributing to a fund
that provides for student scholarships,
conference travel expenses for faculty or student
attendance at professional meetings. Some MSU
alumni designate their contributions for
accounting faculty development purposes, rather
than for discretionary use by the college.
Investigate your firms matching-gifts
program; one of our recruiting firms matches our
alumni donations dollar for dollar. If you do
contribute to a scholarship fund, be sure to
attend the awards ceremony and meet the
appreciative student.
| CPAs can help
produce the best entry-level staffers of
the future by meeting with the accounting
faculty and providing feedback on the
curriculum. |
REAP THE REWARDS
The practitioners
whove been involved in our program have
helped us, our university and our students in
several ways and have gotten rewards of their own
in return. Our students have a variety of
internship opportunities and enjoy nearly a 100%
placement rate. Practitioners say they appreciate
the work ethic and technical competency of our
graduatestheir new colleaguesmany of
whom have already passed the CPA exam. Faculty
stay in contact with our graduates, who inform
them of current developments in the profession,
provide financial support and often return to
recruit from the same program that served them
well.
Todays accounting
students will be tomorrows CPAs and an
important part of the professions future.
Practitioner participation helps build and
maintain high standards in accounting education.
Were convinced you will find partnering
with professors as rewarding and fulfilling as we
do. 
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