Accountants perform a wide variety of activities which include, but are not limited to, accounting, auditing, tax, management consulting, and financial management. However, a professional accountant’s responsibility is not exclusively to satisfy the needs of an employer or professional services client. One of the distinguishing characteristics of the accounting profession is its acceptance of the responsibility to act in the public interest.
This course will introduce you to professional guidance that enables accountants to uphold the obligation to act in the public interest while meeting their professional responsibilities to employers and clients. You will also learn foundational knowledge of the moral dimensions of business that are helpful for recognizing and interpreting the ethical issues embedded in situations you will encounter in your career. Topics in the course include professional standards, values and norms, ethical theories, theories of a firm and business purpose, and corporate governance.
In this module, you will become familiar with the course, your instructor and your classmates, and our learning environment. This orientation will also help you obtain the technical skills required to navigate and be successful in this course.
You will then be introduced to and explore the following three concepts: professional, professions and professional responsibility. It begins with reflections on what it means to be professional. These are followed by a discussion of why being professional is not always sufficient. The discussion introduces what a CPA is and why professions exist. The three characteristics of a profession are identified. Next, the concept of professional responsibility is introduced, followed by a discussion of the three parts of professional responsibility: identity, standards and judgment. The module concludes with a professional association website exploration exercise. The exploration introduces resources central to professional responsibility in accounting. The website exploration exercise also introduces the requirements for obtaining and maintaining CPA licensure and the AICPA Code of Professional Conduct.
Foundations: Professional, Professions, Professional Responsibility Quiz•60 minutes
Orientation Quiz•30 minutes
Lesson 1.1 Knowledge Check•1 minute
Lesson 1.2 Knowledge Check•1 minute
Lesson 1.3 Knowledge Check•1 minute
Lesson 1.4 Knowledge Check•1 minute
Lesson 1.5 Knowledge Check•1 minute
Lesson 1.6 Knowledge Check•1 minute
1 discussion prompt•Total 10 minutes
Get to Know Your Classmates•10 minutes
1 plugin•Total 15 minutes
Welcome! Please Tell Us About Yourself•15 minutes
Module 2 Foundations Part II: Values and Ethics
3 hours to complete
Module details
This module is an introduction to values and ethics. The module begins with reflections on values and how they can be revealed by the objects we choose to keep and what actions we choose to take. The reflections are followed by discussion of what values and norms are and the distinction between them. Next, the process of learning values and norms is described, followed by a brief discussion of why values may be influenced and changed throughout life. Then, a brief description of how most decisions about what is right and wrong are made provides the basis for understanding why it is important to build ethical capacity.
The three areas of moral philosophy, meta-ethics, normative ethics and applied ethics are introduced, followed by brief discussions of exemplar issues/questions that are addressed by each area, which include: characteristics of values, ethical theories and universal values. Discussion of three categories of ethical theories, deontological, teleological and virtue ethics explains the basis on which each determines what the right or good thing to do is. This module also concludes by introducing an on-line resource, one that is useful for developing or refreshing understanding of ethics: the Ethics Unwrapped website. A few short videos from the website build upon the previous discussion of ethical theories and add a brief introduction to two consequentialist ethical theories: hedonism and utilitarianism.
What's included
7 videos2 readings9 assignments
Show info about module content
7 videos•Total 26 minutes
Professional Competence•2 minutes
Family Experience and Personal Values•2 minutes
Beliefs that Drive Behavior•4 minutes
Values Conflicts•4 minutes
Revealing Values & How We Learn Values•4 minutes
What Are Ethics?•4 minutes
More About Ethics•7 minutes
2 readings•Total 20 minutes
Module 2 Overview and Resources•10 minutes
Ethics Unwrapped Videos•10 minutes
9 assignments•Total 107 minutes
Foundations Part II: Values and Ethics Quiz•90 minutes
Lesson 2.1 Knowledge Check•1 minute
Lesson 2.2 Knowledge Check•1 minute
Lesson 2.3 Knowledge Quiz•1 minute
Lesson 2.4 Knowledge Check•1 minute
Lesson 2.5 Knowledge Check•1 minute
Lesson 2.6 Knowledge Check•2 minutes
Lesson 2.7 Knowledge Check•3 minutes
Lesson 2.8 Knowledge Check•7 minutes
Module 3 Debate: The Purpose of Business
5 hours to complete
Module details
This module introduces the debate over what the purpose of business is. The module begins with discussion of legal liability in the three basic legal forms of business: sole proprietorship, partnership and corporation. Clips from interviews with three small business owners illustrate the work ethic they bring to managing their businesses. Next, the development of capitalism is contextualized as a response to mercantilism, the Western European economic system that was dominant when Adam Smith was his two most influential treatises. The discussion draws attention to the ethical roots of capitalism; the centrality of personal autonomy and the compassionate connotations of self-interest. More interview clips illustrate that the concerns of the three small business owners go well beyond merely earning a profit.
Separation of management and owners in the modern corporate form of business has led to debate over what the purpose of a business is. The debate over what and to whom corporate management is and should be accountable is explored. The module introduces two contrasting legal theories of firm. The first theory is the trust relationship between corporate owners and management that is forged through private property rights. The second is the public interest nature of the relationship between society and business. The interests of shareholders and other stakeholders often conflict, but the responsibilities of management to corporate owners and society co-exist. Further discussion provides insights into situational factors that can lead to and justify prioritization of broader stakeholder and societal interests over the general rule of shareholder primacy. Popular culture strongly influences the beliefs of a society. The module ends with a brief discussion of the source of a controversial but highly popular belief that the only moral responsibility of business is to maximize shareholder wealth.
What's included
8 videos1 reading7 assignments1 peer review
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 39 minutes
Ethical Responsibilities of Business•3 minutes
Meet the Business Owners - Part 1•6 minutes
Adam Smith I: Personal Autonomy & the Competitive Markets of Capitalism•4 minutes
Adam Smith II: Compassionate and Ethical Self-Interest•5 minutes
Meet the Business Owners - Part 2•7 minutes
Who Does Corporate Management Serve•6 minutes
Defense of Publically Motivated Corporate Actions•4 minutes
The Moral Obligation to Maximize Shareholder Wealth•4 minutes
1 reading•Total 10 minutes
Module 3 Overview and Resources•10 minutes
7 assignments•Total 211 minutes
Debate: The Purpose of Business Quiz•60 minutes
Lesson 3.1 Knowledge Check•1 minute
Lesson 3.3 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
Lesson 3.4 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
Lesson 3.6 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
Lesson 3.7 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
Lesson 3.8 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
1 peer review•Total 60 minutes
Raising the Floor: A Peer Reviewed Assignment•60 minutes
Module 4 Corporate Governance: Laws, Regulators, Boards of Directors, Codes of Ethics, Ethical Culture
8 hours to complete
Module details
Business generates wealth and prosperity, but hyper-norm beliefs about fairness and theories of distributive justice significantly affect how wealth is distributed throughout society. Corporate governance is the system (of rules, practices, policies, institutions and laws) that directs and controls business. Corporate governance also is one of the key mechanisms through which society determines how wealth and prosperity is distributed. This module introduces corporate governance elements that are external (laws and regulatory agencies) and internal (boards of directors, ethics and compliance programs and organizational culture) to a corporation.
The module includes discussion of two sometimes competing themes that drive the need for and development of corporate governance. These themes extend from the debate over the purpose of business and responsibilities of management that were introduced in the last module. The need for corporate governance is often motivated by the idea of shareholder primacy and the need to protect the private property rights of corporate shareholders in the context of incomplete contracting and information asymmetry. Yet, for nearly a century arguably the most significant legislative reform in US business regulation has resulted from major economic downturns that had significant and wide-spread negative impacts on society as a whole and large-scale corporate ethical lapses, scandals and fraud that ran counter to societal notions of fairness.
What's included
12 videos3 readings11 assignments1 plugin
Show info about module content
12 videos•Total 41 minutes
Tone at the Top•2 minutes
US Regulations•3 minutes
An Economic Perspective•2 minutes
A Different View of Corporate Governance•3 minutes
Proactive Frameworks of Corporate Governance•2 minutes
Board of Directors•4 minutes
Board Committees•6 minutes
Ethics & Compliance Programs•3 minutes
Codes of Ethics•3 minutes
Code and Program Effectiveness•3 minutes
A Conversation with Jeff Lowenstein•5 minutes
A Conversation Continued•5 minutes
3 readings•Total 30 minutes
Module 4 Overview and Resources•10 minutes
Congratulations on completing the course!•10 minutes
Get Your Course Certificate•10 minutes
11 assignments•Total 390 minutes
Corporate Governance: Laws, Regulators, Boards of Directors, Codes of Ethics, Ethical Culture Quiz•90 minutes
Lesson 4.1 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
Lesson 4.2 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
Lesson 4.3 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
Lesson 4.4 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
Lesson 4.5 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
Lesson 4.6 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
Lesson 4.7 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
Lesson 4.8 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
Lesson 4.9 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
Lesson 4.10 Knowledge Check•30 minutes
1 plugin•Total 15 minutes
How was the course?•15 minutes
Build toward a degree
This course is part of the following degree program(s) offered by University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. If you are admitted and enroll, your completed coursework may count toward your degree learning and your progress can transfer with you.¹
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Build toward a degree
This course is part of the following degree program(s) offered by University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. If you are admitted and enroll, your completed coursework may count toward your degree learning and your progress can transfer with you.¹
¹Successful application and enrollment are required. Eligibility requirements apply. Each institution determines the number of credits recognized by completing this content that may count towards degree requirements, considering any existing credits you may have. Click on a specific course for more information.
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