turtleface
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- Apr 12, 2006
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- HSC
- 2004
I think you raise some interesting points Pmtroung
Firstly I think its common practice nowadays for accountings students to defend their profession by associating all the menial, transactional level, bean counting aspects of the accounting process to book-keeping.
I feel sorry for bookkeepers who get maligned solely for being para-professionals. I think it needs to be said that bookkeepers do an important job just like Nurses and Paralegals and IT technicians do for Doctors, Lawyers and IT professionals.
As a cadet, you won't do bookkeeping (because its a totally different job) but I don't think they should expect any high level work requiring professional judgement either, because you are just a grunt/assistant to help out the accountants there.
I don't think you do any "real" accounting until at least the senior/supervisor level.
I think however that there are two issues. One is that book smarts and street smarts are not necessarily mutually exclusive. You could very well have people who are both academically successful, and very good communicators. Two, the academic criteria aspect is more used as a hurdle rather than a selection metric (i.e. you have to get beyond xxxx level to be considered)
It remains to be seen whether your generation of "interpersonal" skilled students now flooding the accounting firms, can achieve what they have.
Firstly I think its common practice nowadays for accountings students to defend their profession by associating all the menial, transactional level, bean counting aspects of the accounting process to book-keeping.
I feel sorry for bookkeepers who get maligned solely for being para-professionals. I think it needs to be said that bookkeepers do an important job just like Nurses and Paralegals and IT technicians do for Doctors, Lawyers and IT professionals.
As a cadet, you won't do bookkeeping (because its a totally different job) but I don't think they should expect any high level work requiring professional judgement either, because you are just a grunt/assistant to help out the accountants there.
I don't think you do any "real" accounting until at least the senior/supervisor level.
Definately propaganda. Accounting is boring, at least at the low levels like for cadets and junior accountants. However, its "boringness" is greatly overstated, particularly by people who don't know what accounting is about. Accounting is boring, but no more so than any other profession like Engineering, Law, Medicine etc.Is it glossy propaganda that they are tellin us naive cadets to make accounting seem more desirable or is it really not that boring?...
Current recruitment trends at the student level suggests that more outgoing, assertive, bubbly, attractive/conventional looking people get favoured over academic high achievers.And is there really a "new breed" of accountants which have book smarts and also interpersonal skills or do they continue to hire steriotyped accounting ppl with insane marks and no personal skills?
I think however that there are two issues. One is that book smarts and street smarts are not necessarily mutually exclusive. You could very well have people who are both academically successful, and very good communicators. Two, the academic criteria aspect is more used as a hurdle rather than a selection metric (i.e. you have to get beyond xxxx level to be considered)
I think that it is also dangerous to malign the stereotypical bean counter too much. The older generation of back office nerds with their calculators and eye shades may not have the respect of the current generation of outgoing, "communicative", interpersonal skilled people, however it has to be remembered that those same beancounters who have no communication, personal skills or any respect from people like you and me are now the leaders of major corporations and organisations (Coles Myer, BHP, Fosters, Qantas, Virgin Blue, Babcock Brown, QBE, Promina etc), government agencies (ASIC etc.) , leaders in politics (Barnaby Joyce) etc."And is there really a "new breed" of accountants which have book smarts and also interpersonal skills or do they continue to hire steriotyped accounting ppl with insane marks and no personal skills?"...
and
..."Their view of accounting was that of someone stuk in a dimly lit room behind an ever growing stack of papers with no life. "
It remains to be seen whether your generation of "interpersonal" skilled students now flooding the accounting firms, can achieve what they have.
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