Texas Administrative Code
Title 19 - EDUCATION
Part 2 - TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY
Chapter 130 - TEXAS ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS FOR CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION
Subchapter F - FINANCE
Section 130.187 - Accounting I (One Credit), Adopted 2015
Universal Citation: 19 TX Admin Code ยง 130.187
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) General requirements. This course is recommended for students in Grades 10-12. Recommended prerequisite: Principles of Business, Marketing, and Finance. Students shall be awarded one credit for successful completion of this course.
(b) Introduction.
(1) Career and technical education
instruction provides content aligned with challenging academic standards and
relevant technical knowledge and skills for students to further their education
and succeed in current or emerging professions.
(2) The Finance Career Cluster focuses on
planning, services for financial and investment planning, banking, insurance,
and business financial management.
(3) Accounting encompasses careers that
record, classify, summarize, analyze, and communicate a business's financial
information/business transactions for use in management decision making.
Accounting includes such activities as bookkeeping, systems design, analysis,
and interpretation of accounting information.
(4) In Accounting I, students will
investigate the field of accounting, including how it is impacted by industry
standards as well as economic, financial, technological, international, social,
legal, and ethical factors. Students will reflect on this knowledge as they
engage in the process of recording, classifying, summarizing, analyzing, and
communicating accounting information. Students will formulate and interpret
financial information for use in management decision making.
(5) Students are encouraged to participate in
extended learning experiences such as career and technical student
organizations and other leadership or extracurricular organizations.
(6) Statements that contain the word
"including" reference content that must be mastered, while those containing the
phrase "such as" are intended as possible illustrative examples.
(c) Knowledge and skills.
(1) The student demonstrates professional
standards/employability skills as required by business and industry. The
student is expected to:
(A) demonstrate
effective oral and written communication skills;
(B) perform numerical and arithmetic
applications;
(C) demonstrate an
understanding of integrity and strong work ethic;
(D) demonstrate attention to detail in
completed assignments; and
(E)
demonstrate effective problem solving.
(2) The student communicates an understanding
of the accounting industry. The student is expected to:
(A) describe the purpose of accounting and
financial reporting;
(B) discuss
its impact on industry; and
(C)
describe Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP).
(3) The student uses career planning
concepts, tools, and strategies to explore accounting careers. The student is
expected to:
(A) discuss the significance of
responsibility in accounting such as ethical and social
responsibility;
(B) explore careers
in accounting, including education requirements, roles, and responsibilities of
certified public accountants, general ledger accountants, management
accountants, auditors, government accountants, international accountants,
forensic accountants, and senior management in accounting; and
(C) identify accounting licensing and
certification programs, including professional designations for accountants
such as certified public accountant and certified management
accountant.
(4) The
student uses equations, graphical representations, accounting tools,
strategies, and automated systems in real-world situations to maintain,
monitor, control, and plan the use of financial resources. The student will
complete an accounting cycle for a service business. The student is expected
to:
(A) illustrate the accounting
cycle;
(B) analyze the effects of
transactions on the accounting equation and use T accounts to analyze
transactions;
(C) prepare a chart
of accounts;
(D) journalize
transactions in a general journal;
(E) post journal entries to general ledger
accounts;
(F) prepare work
sheets;
(G) prepare a trial
balance;
(H) journalize and post
adjusting and closing entries;
(I)
prepare a post-closing trial balance; and
(J) prepare financial statements, including
income statements, balance sheets, statements of stockholders' equity, and
changes in owners' equity.
(5) The student analyzes cash controls. The
student is expected to:
(A) explain cash
control procedures such as bank account access, dual control, timely account
reconciliations, and security of check stock;
(B) prove cash and reconcile bank
statements;
(C) journalize and post
entries to establish and replenish petty cash;
(D) journalize and post entries related to
banking activities; and
(E) explain
the benefits of electronic funds transfer.
(6) The student performs accounting functions
for a merchandising business. The student is expected to explain the nature of
special journals and recording transactions in special journals.
(7) The student performs accounts payable
functions. The student is expected to:
(A)
maintain a vendor file;
(B) analyze
purchase transactions;
(C) post to
an accounts payable subsidiary ledger;
(D) process invoices for payment;
(E) prepare a schedule of accounts payable;
and
(F) analyze the impact of
accounts payable on the balance sheet and cash flow statements.
(8) The student performs accounts
receivable functions. The student is expected to:
(A) explain the nature of accounts
receivable;
(B) maintain a customer
file for accounts receivable;
(C)
analyze sales transactions;
(D)
post to an accounts receivable subsidiary ledger;
(E) process sales orders, returns, and
allowances;
(F) process customer
payments;
(G) process uncollectible
accounts;
(H) prepare a schedule of
accounts receivable;
(I) determine
uncollectible accounts receivable; and
(J) analyze the impact of accounts receivable
on the balance sheet and cash flow statements.
(9) The student investigates merchandise
inventory to determine the impact on a company's financial position. The
student is expected to:
(A) discuss the
importance of merchandise inventory to a corporation, including the benefits of
determining the most efficient inventory levels;
(B) explain the difference between periodic
and perpetual methods of calculating inventory quantities, including the use of
inventory records, stock records, and point-of-sale terminals;
(C) calculate the cost of inventory,
including the First In, First Out (FIFO) method, Last In, First Out (LIFO)
method, weighted average method, and the Gross Profit method of estimating
inventory; and
(D) analyze the
results of valuing inventory under the FIFO method, LIFO method, weighted
average method, and the Gross Profit method of estimating inventory to
determine the effect on Net Income and Gross Profit.
(10) The student completes payroll procedures
to calculate, record, and distribute payroll earnings and analyzes the impact
of these expenses on a company's financial position. The student is expected
to:
(A) interpret time cards to calculate
hours worked;
(B) maintain employee
earnings records and registers;
(C)
calculate employee earnings, including gross earnings, withholdings, and net
pay;
(D) journalize salary
expenses;
(E) calculate employer
payroll taxes;
(F) journalize
payroll tax expenses;
(G) discuss
payroll tax expense forms and reports; and
(H) analyze the impact of salary expenses and
payroll tax expense on total expenses and net income.
(11) The student performs specialized
accounting functions for a corporation and completes an accounting cycle. The
student is expected to:
(A) analyze the
articles of incorporation needed to start a corporation;
(B) journalize the issuance of
stock;
(C) compute dividends
payable on stock;
(D) complete a
work sheet for a corporation, including calculating adjustments for
depreciation, merchandise inventory, and federal taxes;
(E) prepare financial statements for a
corporation, including a balance sheet, an income statement, a statement of
stockholders' equity, and a statement of changes in retained
earnings;
(F) understand that
internal accounting controls exist to ensure the proper recording of financial
transactions; and
(G) identify and
perform tax accounting functions such as recordkeeping procedures and the
nature of corporate tax accounting.
(12) The student describes laws and
regulations in order to manage business operations and transactions in
accounting. The student is expected to:
(A)
describe regulation of accounting;
(B) identify and analyze historical events
that led to the regulation of accounting such as the fall of Enron; WorldCom;
Tyco International, Ltd.; Adelphia Communications; and Arthur
Andersen;
(C) describe the impact
of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 on internal controls and financial
reporting;
(D) describe the role of
the Securities and Exchange Commission in regulating the accounting
industry;
(E) discuss state
regulation of the accounting industry; and
(F) identify and research a case study
involving a historically significant compliance or regulatory issue that led to
the formation of regulatory agencies or laws, including:
(i) formulating questions to analyze the
issue;
(ii) gathering relevant
sources;
(iii) evaluating the
validity and reliability of those sources; and
(iv) determining which laws and regulations
apply.
(13)
The student accesses, processes, maintains, evaluates, and disseminates
financial information to assist business decision making. The student is
expected to:
(A) use accounting technology,
including discussing the use of data mining and integrating technology into
accounting;
(B) engage in an
accounting simulation covering an accounting cycle; and
(C) create a clear and coherent oral
presentation that analyzes the results of an accounting simulation covering an
accounting cycle and includes the use of correct grammar, spelling,
punctuation, and citation of resource materials.
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