Auditing and Assurance Services with ACL Software CD |  | Authors: William Messier, Steven Glover, Douglas Prawitt Publisher: McGraw-Hill/Irwin Category: Book
Buy Used: $145.99 as of 7/29/2010 15:03 CDT details
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Seller: joe_liu861 Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 5966
Media: Hardcover Edition: 7 Pages: 576 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.3 Dimensions (in): 10.9 x 8.7 x 1.3
ISBN: 0077343468 Dewey Decimal Number: 657.45 EAN: 9780077343460 ASIN: 0077343468
Publication Date: November 11, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Messier employs the audit approach currently being used by auditing professionals. This approach is a direct result of the demands of Sarbanes-Oxley, which has changed the way auditors do their jobs. The approach emphasizes understanding the entity (i.e., the organization or business being audited) and its environment (i.e. industry), and then assessing the business risks faced by the entity and how management controls those risks. This audit process focuses on business processes instead of accounting cycles. This unique and innovative approach has been developed in response to changing market dynamics. The systematic approach, referred to in the subtitle of the text, reflects the early introduction of three basic concepts that underlie the audit process: materiality, audit risk, and evidence; this allows Messier to build upon this model in subsequent chapters. These are central to everything an auditor does and a unique feature of Messier. As such, this approach helps students develop auditor judgment, a vital skill in today’s auditing environment.
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| Customer Reviews: School Textbook April 24, 2010 James W. Clark This is a good textbook for the topic. It could use more concrete examples to illuminate the technical points. I'd rate it 4.5 if partial stars were allowed.
New method of presentation needs to be refined during the next edition May 2, 2006 Ryan D. Yoeckel (Chicago, IL United States) 10 out of 13 found this review helpful
I have just finished a course that used this textbook. To me, it is clear that auditing has undergone a dramatic change. That is, this book lacks clarity and specificity.
My bias, however, is that I have a hard time believing that auditors are concerned with a bussiness' control environment and its understanding of management's response to risk factors.
Instead, I believe that auditors still need to spend time "verifying amounts and tracing journal entries to source documents." Those tasks seem monumental enough for an audit engagement.
I left the class wondering, "What do auditors do?" In conclusion, I am not sure that I could perform any audit procedures beyond bank reconciliations and confirmation letters after reading this book. Yet, I do have an understanding of the framework and justification for why we need auditors.
To the book's credit, I did learn how to assess risks, use the audit risk model, make preliminary judgments about materiality, and, in a general way, relate an audit procedure to the management assertion it is supposed to test.
If you want an epistemology of auditing, read this book. If you would rather begin learning how to do auditing, this book will not be helpful.
horrible book, poorly orgnized June 1, 2010 X. Liu (Portland, OR USA) can't say more than the tile...after the whole term finishes, the book makes me more confused...
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