waiter said:
hey kid, congratulations on remembering your auditing 1000 definitions... finals coming up soon, so you seem to be in shape.
For the record I'm in 2nd year so I've not got up to the subject yet. I'm really looking forward to it though.
lol so you actually did work experience at a big 4 firm? hahahah and you suddenly think you know everything?? HAHAHAHHAHA.... fkn turd.
thats why i openly admitted that only vacationers/grads do ticking (or in my case i did some stuff for the marketing dept. cause audit was so overstaffed with students) I base my opinions on observing the work of partners and the managers who deal with the more professional judgement issues. I was lucky enough to also observe an independence issue pan out and eventually resolve. And not just the 1 work experience. Unlike you, I've put some research into auditing asking lecturers who were former auditors about it, asking Accountants at other work experience places I've been at etc.
Where do you get your experience? Sounds like you're not even talking about Financial audits, more like the food temperature and safety audits they do subject me to at safeway(Woolworths in Victoria) (regularly I might add). Memo: those dudes aren't accounting auditors
Get your facts straight before you come and bag other people for being clueless.
It's absolutely hilarious listening to wide-eyed enthusiastic fools like you who believe and swallow everything. I highly recommend you to get some life experience and see the real world before feeding bullshit to others.
thanks, but I'll think I'll stick to my supposidly fake world I'm in right now and go play with my fairies rather than go into your supposed "real" world where audit is bullshit, uni education is theoretical bullshit and the only thing that isn't bs is lining up at centrelink .
waiter said:
But now now. It's ok. You don't have to go out of your way to justify your chosen profession on a forum, to make yourself feel better in real life.
I agree, but unfortunately it has to done to defend auditing from the bs that people like you, who I know believe actually has no clue about it, concocts.
-------
Edit: Casmira, you should be able to fit an Accounting Major in with Finance and Bus Law. You can at my uni, but I'm not sure with yours.
CA Conversion courses are done after you find a job I think, and decide you want to do a CA without an Accounting major.
There is now an option to do a Non Accounting major and still be eligible for the CA program. They ask you to do a CA diagnostics test, and then they force you to do a few courses in areas where you fail the test on. Its probably best to call the ICAA admissions dept and ask them about this. The reason the ICAA is allowing non accounting majors now is cause they realised they were losing a lot of potential good members with the accounting major restriction.
It doesnt hurt to have a CA for Ibankers and a lot of them do, but don't ever feel you have to get one to get in. Most people don't. If you want to do IBanking do your finance/bus law (and maybe honours if you miss out first time). If you do an Accounting major as well, you can use it as a backup to get into an accounting job, do your CA, and try for IBanking again through that route. Or you can go straight onto a MBA. But that'll mean about 8 yrs at uni. But all this stuff I'm saying is from a melb uni point of view, its best to check with your local depts.