Artigo Revisado por pares

Communication skills in accounting education: Perceptions of academics, employers and graduate accountants

1994; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 3; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/09639289400000020

ISSN

1468-4489

Autores

Omar Abdullah Zaid, Anne Abraham, Anne Abraham,

Tópico(s)

Management and Marketing Education

Resumo

Communication skills are central to intellectual interaction between the providers and the recipients of information. The importance of accounting starts with the gathering and processing of information and ends with the communication of processed information. This paper examines the communication skills which employers, academics and graduate accountants consider necessary to the newly graduated accountant. It also identifies and considers the differences in perception which occur between these groups and suggests solutions to the communication gap. This study confirms findings from previous research that new graduate accountants experience communication-related problems in early employment. In addition, it provides evidence that the Australian accounting curriculum has contributed to the development of communication skills. However, the paper highlights the need for the reconsideration of an emphasis on communication skills in the accounting curriculum, a role which arises from the very nature of accounting as the processing and communication of information.

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