Mr Grant Gay
6 points · Two 1-hour lectures and one 1-hour tutorial per week · Second semester · Clayton · Prerequisites: AFC1021/AFC1022 and AFC1031/AFC1032 (pass division I) · Prohibition: AFC2160 (taught prior to 1993)
Objectives On completion of this subject students
should be able to identify the objectives and principal characteristics of
different types of audits, with particular emphasis on financial report audits;
understand the demand for audit services and the benefits derived from audits;
be able to apply the legal, ethical and professional rules which govern the
conduct of audits; be familiar with the concepts and means used by auditors to
plan, gather evidence and make judgments in order to form an audit opinion, in
both CIS and non-computer, environments; be familiar with the form and content
required for different types of audit reports, including the factors which give
rise to qualified audit reports.
Synopsis Topics covered in this subject include an overview of the audit
function and of different types of audits; duties of the external auditor; the
auditor's liability to third parties; detection and reporting of irregularities
including fraud, error and illegal acts; the audit process and techniques
including planning, tests of controls, substantive testing, reviewing internal
control structure, gathering audit evidence, using analytical procedures, and
audit sampling; the audit of computer information systems including the use of
computer-assisted audit techniques; audit reporting; internal auditing;
performance auditing; and current developments and emerging issues.
Assessment Written (2000 words): 15% · Mid-semester test (50 minutes): 15% · Tutorial presentation: 10% · Examination (3 hours): 60%
Prescribed texts
Australian Society of CPAs and the Institute of Chartered Accounts in Australia Auditing handbook Prentice-Hall, latest edn
Back to the 1999 Business and Economics Handbook