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 130.188 - Accounting II (One Credit), Adopted 2015
Universal Citation: 19 TX Admin Code ยง 130.188
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) General requirements. This course is recommended for students in Grades 11 and 12. Prerequisite: Accounting I. This course satisfies a high school mathematics graduation requirement. 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 II, students will continue
the investigation of 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 various managerial, financial, and operational
accounting activities. Students will formulate, interpret, and communicate
financial information for use in management decision making. Students will use
equations, graphical representations, accounting tools, spreadsheet software,
and accounting systems in real-world situations to maintain, monitor, control,
and plan the use of financial resources.
(5) The mathematical process standards
describe ways in which students are expected to engage in the content. The
placement of the process standards at the beginning of the knowledge and skills
listed for each grade and course is intentional. The process standards weave
the other knowledge and skills together so that students may be successful
problem solvers and use mathematics efficiently and effectively in daily life.
The process standards are integrated at every grade level and course. When
possible, students will apply mathematics to problems arising in everyday life,
society, and the workplace. Students will use a problem-solving model that
incorporates analyzing given information, formulating a plan or strategy,
determining a solution, justifying the solution, and evaluating the
problem-solving process and the reasonableness of the solution. Students will
select appropriate tools such as real objects, manipulatives, paper and pencil,
and technology and techniques such as mental math, estimation, and number sense
to solve problems. Students will effectively communicate mathematical ideas,
reasoning, and their implications using multiple representations such as
symbols, diagrams, graphs, and language. Students will use mathematical
relationships to generate solutions and make connections and predictions.
Students will analyze mathematical relationships to connect and communicate
mathematical ideas. Students will display, explain, or justify mathematical
ideas and arguments using precise mathematical language in written or oral
communication.
(6) Students are
encouraged to participate in extended learning experiences such as career and
technical student organizations and other leadership or extracurricular
organizations.
(7) 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 uses mathematical processes
to acquire and demonstrate mathematical understanding. The student is expected
to:
(A) apply mathematics to problems arising
in everyday life, society, and the workplace;
(B) use a problem-solving model that
incorporates analyzing given information, formulating a plan or strategy,
determining a solution, justifying the solution, and evaluating the
problem-solving process and the reasonableness of the solution;
(C) select tools, including real objects,
manipulatives, paper and pencil, and technology as appropriate, and techniques,
including mental math, estimation, and number sense as appropriate, to solve
problems;
(D) communicate
mathematical ideas, reasoning, and their implications using multiple
representations, including symbols, diagrams, graphs, and language as
appropriate;
(E) create and use
representations to organize, record, and communicate mathematical
ideas;
(F) analyze mathematical
relationships to connect and communicate mathematical ideas; and
(G) display, explain, and justify
mathematical ideas and arguments using precise mathematical language in written
or oral communication.
(3) The student performs accounting functions
specific to a corporation. The student is expected to:
(A) analyze articles of
incorporation;
(B) communicate
methods used to account for the issuance of stock;
(C) compute the number of shares of common
stock to be issued on the conversion of convertible preferred stock;
(D) compute dividends payable on
stock;
(E) describe internal
accounting controls that exist to ensure the proper recording of financial
transactions;
(F) produce financial
statements, including work sheets, income statements, statements of
stockholders' equity, balance sheets, cash flow statements, and statements of
changes in retained earnings;
(G)
discuss the nature of consolidated financial statements;
(H) discuss the nature of corporate tax
accounting; and
(I) perform
accounting functions specific to corporate tax accounting, including
calculating corporate taxes and target profits and preparing corporate tax
returns.
(4) The student
discusses and performs accounting functions in a financial statement analysis.
The student is expected to:
(A) explain the
nature of annual reports;
(B)
discuss the use of financial ratios in accounting and explain how this data
impacts business decisions;
(C)
determine business liquidity, including current ratio, quick ratio, and cash
ratio;
(D) calculate business
profitability, including gross profit margin, operating profit margin, net
profit margin, cash flow margin, return on assets, return on investment, and
return on equity, and analyze the relationships between these ratios;
(E) compute business efficiency ratios,
including inventory turnover ratio, accounts receivable turnover ratio,
accounts payable turnover ratio, average payment period, and average collection
period;
(F) determine business
operating ratio;
(G) calculate
business capital structure ratios, including debt-to-equity ratio and debt
service coverage;
(H) compare
financial ratios to industry benchmarks and past performance to identify key
areas that need to be evaluated and improved; and
(I) formulate and present recommendations
based on financial ratio comparisons using spreadsheet software, graphs, and
charts that identify business strategies and solutions needed to improve
financial performance.
(5) The student describes and employs
managerial accounting concepts. The student is expected to:
(A) explain the nature of managerial cost
accounting, including costs and cost drivers;
(B) conduct cost-volume-profit analysis,
including the use of linear regression data to determine the relationship
between production and costs;
(C)
identify cost accounting systems such as job order costing, process costing,
activity-based costing, and project costing;
(D) calculate the cost of goods
sold;
(E) compute overhead
rates;
(F) apply overhead to
jobs;
(G) describe the nature of
cost accounting decision making;
(H) discuss the nature of cost accounting
budgets;
(I) explain and create a
variance analysis;
(J) discuss the
nature of cost allocation;
(K)
compute variable costs and contribution margins for a product;
(L) determine relevant costs in make-or-buy
and accept-or-reject decisions;
(M)
evaluate make-or-buy and accept-or-reject decisions to identify the best
solutions for a business;
(N)
prepare written recommendations that identify make-or-buy and accept-or-reject
solutions using empirical data to support and justify conclusions;
(O) perform cost allocation functions;
and
(P) prepare cost of production
reports.
(6) The student
maintains, monitors, controls, and plans the use of financial resources to
ensure business stability. The student is expected to:
(A) describe fundamental financial concepts
involved in the management of corporate finances, including the nature of
depreciation and cash flows;
(B)
analyze the need for efficient capital markets in corporate finance;
(C) explore the capital budgeting
process;
(D) perform calculations
necessary for capital budget decision making, including:
(i) calculating the initial investment
associated with a proposed capital expenditure;
(ii) determining operating cash inflows;
and
(iii) determining terminal cash
flow;
(E) conduct
cash-flow analysis to select an acceptable capital expenditure, including:
(i) interpreting the nature of relevant cash
flow-analysis;
(ii) explaining the
nature of the payback period;
(iii)
calculating the payback period;
(iv) explaining the relationship between the
internal rate of return and net present value;
(v) calculating the net present value and
future value; and
(vi) calculating
the internal rate of return;
(F) explain the role of financial planning in
corporate finance, including the financial planning process, short-term
operating, and long-term strategic planning;
(G) conduct cash planning, including:
(i) explaining the use of cash
budgets;
(ii) coping with
uncertainty in cash budgets;
(iii)
preparing a cash budget; and
(iv)
evaluating a cash budget;
(H) conduct profit planning, including pro
forma income statements and balance sheets;
(I) define and describe the nature of
short-term financial management;
(J) explain the role of valuation in making
appropriate financial decisions for a company, including:
(i) discussing the role of project valuation
in capital allocation decisions;
(ii) comparing methods for valuing
flexibility; and
(iii) discussing
the valuation implications in business finance;
(K) use capital market securities to secure
financing for a company, including:
(i)
analyzing models and methods to determine the best financing option for a
company;
(ii) analyzing the nature
of corporate bonds;
(iii) analyzing
and determining the cost of long-term debt;
(iv) describing the issuance of stock from a
corporation;
(v) comparing and
contrasting preferred stock and common stock;
(vi) calculating the cost of preferred stock
and common stock; and
(vii)
computing leverage and debt to equity ratios;
(L) explain the role of dividends in
corporate finance, including forms of dividends and reinvestment
plans;
(M) describe the effect of a
firm's dividend decisions on its external financing requirements;
(N) illustrate the residual theory of
dividends;
(O) describe the impact
of dividends on the value of the firm;
(P) explain the nature of a dividend
policy;
(Q) explain factors to
consider when deciding on the form of dividend distribution; and
(R) analyze ownership change transactions,
including:
(i) comparing mergers and
acquisitions;
(ii) explaining the
nature of hostile takeovers;
(iii)
discussing issues that arise from mergers and acquisitions;
(iv) explaining methods for evaluating
potential merger/acquisition targets;
(v) evaluating potential merger and
acquisition targets; and
(vi)
analyzing the nature of restructurings.
(7) The student describes laws and
regulations in order to manage business operations and transactions in
accounting. The student is expected to:
(A)
describe and discuss regulation of accounting, including:
(i) the impact of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002 on accounting;
(ii) the role
of the Securities and Exchange Commission in regulating the accounting
industry;
(iii) the state
regulation of the accounting industry; and
(iv) the impact of International Financial
Reporting Standards (IFRS) versus Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
(GAAP); and
(B) identify
and research a case study involving a fraud, compliance, or regulatory issue or
possible scenario, including:
(i) formulating
questions to analyze the issue;
(ii) gathering relevant sources;
(iii) evaluating the validity and reliability
of those sources;
(iv) identifying
and communicating which laws and regulations apply;
(v) gathering data that supports evidence of
fraud or non-compliance with regulations; and
(vi) creating a clear and coherent
presentation, including the use of correct grammar, spelling, punctuation, and
citation of resource materials.
(8) The student accesses, processes,
maintains, evaluates, and disseminates financial information to assist business
decision making. The student is expected to:
(A) use technology to acquire information
such as the use of data mining and automated financial programs into
accounting; and
(B) create a clear
and coherent oral and written presentation that includes the use of correct
grammar, spelling, punctuation, and citation of resource materials on a current
topic in accounting using concepts learned in this course.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Texas may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google
Privacy Policy and
Terms of Service apply.