Name: ROBERT E. JENSEN
Former Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor
of Business Administration at Trinity University


Voice: (603) 823-8482            Fax: (210) 999-8134
email: rjensen@trinity.edu Home: (210) 653-5055
Web Site: http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen
The above web site is featured in The Chronicle of
Higher Education
, August 14, 1998, Page A25

Most Recent Employer: Trinity University
Address: One Trinity Place
San Antonio, Texas, USA 78212-7200

Table of Contents

Education

CPA Certification

Teaching Experience

Courses Taught

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Biographical Sketch

Robert E. Jensen
http://WWW.Trinity.edu/rjensen/ 
The above web site featured in The Chronicle of Higher Education, August 14, 1998, Page A25

On August 15, 2002, Professor Jensen received the American Accounting Association's Outstanding Accounting Educator Award from the American Accounting Association.  In 2004, he received the AI/ET Section Outstanding Educator Award for 2002-2003 Year. The AI/ET Section is the Artificial Intelligence/Emerging Technologies Section of the American Accounting Association.  He has been an invited speaker at over 350 colleges and universities.   He has a Ph.D. in accounting from Stanford University (1966).  On May 14, 2006 he retired as the Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration at Trinity University in San Antonio.  He was formerly the Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co. Professor of Accounting and Department Chairman at The Florida State University (1978-82), the Nicholas M. Salgo Professor of Accounting at the University of Maine (1968-78), and Associate Professor at Michigan State University (1966-68).  He also worked as a CPA for Ernst & Ernst in Denver, Colorado (1959-61).  After stepping down as Department Chairman at Florida State University in 1982, he returned to full-time teaching and research at Trinity University.  He has lectured extensively both inside and outside the United States.  In November 2000 he was an invited to speak at the National Taiwan University.  In June 2001, he is invited to lecture at the Globalization of Business Conference in Berlin.  In October, he is invited to lecture on International Accounting Issues in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. In Fall of 1998 he lectured in New Zealand at the University of Canterbury, Lincoln University and the University of Auckland.  In 1993 he conducted a multimedia lecture tour in Finland, Sweden, the U.K., and Germany, and was the 1993/94 British Accounting Association's Distinguished International Visiting Scholar.  For Summer 1983, he received a Visiting Scholar Award from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.  He conducted research seminars at the University of Waterloo.  He received a similar award for Summer 1984 from the University of Manitoba.  In the Summer of 1988, he was invited to lecture at an Advanced Studies Institute (in Portugal) sponsored by NATO.  He has lectured at the London School of Economics, Manchester Business School, University of Lancaster, University of Glasgow, Strathclyde University, Uppsula University, Skovide University, South Bank University, Southampton Institute, University of Warwick, and the North Atlantic Accounting Conference in Amsterdam.  In the past decade he has been an invited speaker at numerous universities and research conferences, including the 1992 Nissan Summer Institute for Historically Black Colleges.  He has been an invited speaker at nearly 400 colleges and universities.

            Professor Jensen has made nearly 400 presentations on wide ranging research topics in accounting theory and education technology. In retirement his road shows focus especially upon education technology, accounting for derivative financial instruments (FAS 133 and IAS 39), accounting for intangibles and environmental contingencies, and fair value accounting (FAS 155, 157, and 159).  His longer resume is available at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/resume.htm
His accounting theory and other Web documents are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Threads.htm 

            Professor Jensen has spent two years in "think-tank" research on the campus of Stanford University:  1971/72 as a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences and 1973/74 as a Guggenheim Fellow.  He was named recipient of The University of Maine Presidential Research Award in 1976 and in 1978 was voted Outstanding Professor by the Graduate Business Student Association at the University of Maine.  He was also voted Outstanding Professor by the Minority Business Association at Florida State University in 1982.  His publications are mainly devoted to research papers and monographs.  A 1994 book co-authored with Petrea Sandlin is entitled Electronic Teaching and Learning:  Trends in Adapting to Hypertext, Hypermedia, and Networks in University Accounting Education.  His first monograph was entitled Phantasmagoric Accounting published in 1977 by the American Accounting Association.  Another research monograph on futurism and assumption analysis was also funded by the American Accounting Association.  A second monograph entitled Review of Forecasts:  Scaling and Analysis of Expert Judgments Regarding Cross-Impacts of Assumptions on Business, Forecasts and Accounting Measures appeared in 1983.  In addition to research papers, he also has two mystery novels near completion.  In August 1988, he was elected to a two-year term as Academic Vice President of the American Accounting Association.  He was the 1989/90 Vice President of the South Texas Chapter of the Financial Executives Institute and became its President for the 1990/91 term.

            A major interest in teaching and research in recent years has been the future of education in the electronic classroom without walls via computer networking.  He has programmed over 2,000 hours of lecture and case material.  His website has won prizes as an education portal.  In 1995 he was selected for the Irwin Technology in Education Advisory Board.  In July of 1996, he was appointed to the American Accounting Association Committee on Electronic Materials and Dissemination.  In 1996, he received the $1,000 CETA Technology in Education Award.  In 1997, he received a $41,500 software grant from Microsoft Corporation, a $5,000 Mellon Foundation Grant, and a $1,500 research grant from Irwin Publishing Company.

 

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Start of Resume

Name: ROBERT E. JENSEN
Title: Emeritus Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
        
Retired in May 2006
Voice: (603) 823-8482  Fax: (210) 736-8134
email: rjensen@trinity.edu  Home: (210) 653-5055
Web Site: http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Address: 190 Sunset Hill Road, Sugar Hill, NH 03586
              http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/NHcottage/NHcottage.htm

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Personal Data

Birthdate April 30, 1938
Citizenship United States of America
Marital Status Married (Erika)
Children Two (Marshall, Lisl)
Birthplace Estherville, Iowa

Educational and Professional History

Education

  • Stanford University 7/61-9/65 Business Ph.D. (1966)
    Title of Dissertation: 
    A Study of Effects of Alternate Accounting Systems on Security Analysis and Portfolio Selection Decisions
  • Algona High School 9/52-6/56 Algona, Iowa

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CPA Certification

Holder of C.P.A. Certificate 1128, Chapter 32, August 1961 (Colorado)  No longer a practicing CPA

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Teaching Experience

I taught during only eight of the ten academic years at the University of Maine. During the 1971-72 academic year, I was a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences in Stanford, California. I also returned to Stanford in the 1974-75 academic year on a Guggenheim Fellowship.

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Courses Taught

Fall 1978 ACC 5312 5 Accounting Concepts for Managerial Control

Fall 1979 ACC 5011 4 Accounting Concepts

Winter 1979 ACC 6939 5 Doctoral Seminar in Accounting

Spring 1979 ACC 5312 5 Accounting Concepts for Managerial Control

Winter 1980 ACC 6939 4 Doctoral Seminar in Accounting

Spring 1980 ACC 5011 4 Accounting Concepts

Summer 1980 ACC 5011 4 Accounting Concepts

Fall 1980 ACC 5011 4 Accounting Concepts

Winter 1981 ACC 6939 4 Doctoral Seminar in Accounting

Spring 1981 ACC 5011 4 Accounting Concepts

Fall 1981 ACC 6939 4 Doctoral Seminar in Accounting

Spring 1982 ACC 5011 4 Accounting Concepts

Spring 1976 100 Var Field Experience

Spring 1976 320 3 Managerial Accounting

Spring 1976 341 3 Operations Research

Summer 1977 321 3 Accounting for Planning and Control

Fall 1977 100 Var Field Experience

Fall 1977 320 3 Managerial Acctg.

Fall 1977 301 3 Quantitative Analysis for Business Decisions

Fall 1982 to 1989 ACCT 311 Financial Accounting I

Spring 1983 to 1990 ACCT 312  Financial Accounting II

Spring 1986 QUAN 332 Statistical Analysis

Fall 1985 to 1997ACCT 331 Cost Accounting

Spring 1989 to 1997 ACCT 370 Accounting Theory

Spring 1991 to 1993 GNED 300 Philosophy Seminar

Spring 1993 to 1997 MGMT 310 Computers in Business

Fall 1997 to Present ACCT 1302 Managerial Accounting

Fall 1997 ACCT 5342 to Present Accounting Information Systems (Graduate)

Spring 1998 ACCT 5341 to Present Accounting Theory (Graduate)

 

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Work Experience

  • Ernst & Ernst C.P.A. 9/59-4/61 Auditing and Taxation
  • Taught various short courses at conferences and symposia (see Part H).

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Honors and Recognitions

In April 2008 a paper that I co-authored with Jean Heck was chosen by Editorial Board Members as the second best paper published by the Accounting Historians Journal in 2007. This additionally comes with a monetary award that I will split with my co-author. This paper critical of academic accounting research, that The Accounting Review did not want published, is as follows:

“An Analysis of the Evolution of Research Contributions by The Accounting Review: 1926-2005,” by Jean Heck and Robert E. Jensen, Accounting Historians Journal,, Volume 34, No. 2, December 2007, pp. 109-142

In August 2003 in Honolulu, I received the AI/ET Section Outstanding Educator Award for 2002-2003 Year.  The AI/ET Section is the Artificial Intelligence/Emerging Technologies Section of the American Accounting Association.  Only one person is selected each year. http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/aiet/aiethome.htm

On August 15, 2002, I received the Outstanding Accounting Educator Award at the Annual Meetings of the American Accounting Association and a $10,000 gift from the Pricewaterhouse Coopers Foundation --- http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/awards/award4.htm .

My web site was featured in The Chronicle of Higher Education, August 14, 1998, Page A25.

1997 $41,500 software grant from Microsoft Corporation, a $5,000 Mellon Foundation Grant, and a $1,500 research grant from Irwin Publishing Company. I also became a paid consultant on the Irwin Technology Advisory Board.

1996 Educational Technology in Accounting $1,000 Award funded by the Center for Education Technology in Accounting (CETA). The recipient is selected by a selection committee of the Teaching and Curriculum Section of the American Accounting Association.

Named in 1995 as one of five professors in the United States to the Irwin Technology in Education Advisory Board.

I consider it an honor when professors show up at my doorstep to "shadow" me while I work. Apart from visitations of one or two days, there have been more extended shadows ranging from Professor E. Thomas Robinson from the University of Alaska who shadowed me for two weeks in 1995 to Professor Brian Zwicker from Alberta who shadowed me for nine weeks in 1995. There have been a number of such shadows over the years, highlighted by Professor Masao Takutani from Seiki University in Tokyo who shadowed me for ten months.

Named British Accounting Association's 1993/94 Visiting International Scholar. Received a $5,000 stipend to conduct lectures at various campuses in the United Kingdom.

Received a 1993 visiting lecturer grant of $1,000 plus travel expenses from the University of Uppsala and Skovde University for lectures delivered in Fall 1993.

 

Winner (along with Bruce Sidlinger and John Howland) of the 1998 AICPA's Academic/Practitioner Case Competition.  On the first round the case was one of 12 in the nation accepted for Publication by the AICPA.  It was then selected as one of six to be presented at the AICPA's Accounting Educators Conference in McLean, Virginia, November 7, 1998.

 

1997 $41,500 software grant from Microsoft Corporation, a $5,000 Mellon Foundation Grant, and a $1,500 research grant from Irwin Publishing Company.  I also became a paid consultant on the Irwin Technology Advisory Board.

 

1996 Educational Technology in Accounting $1,000 Award funded by the Center for Education Technology in Accounting (CETA).  The recipient is selected by a selection committee of the Teaching and Curriculum Section of the American Accounting Association.

 

Named in 1995 as one of five professors in the United States to the Irwin Technology in Education Advisory Board.  The appointment is contracted for three years.

 

Named British Accounting Association's 1993/94 Visiting International Scholar.  Received a $5,000 stipend to conduct lectures at five campuses in the United Kingdom.

 

Received a 1993 visiting lecture grant of $1,000 plus travel expenses from the University of Uppsala and Skovde University for lectures delivered in Fall 1993.

 

Invited in Spring of 1993 to present a hypermedia show at the European Accounting Association Annual Meetings at the Turku School of Economics and Business in Turku, Finland.

 

Invited lecturer in three Trueblood Seminars in 1991, the AAA Senior Faculty Consortium in 1991, The European Accounting Association Congress of 1991 in Holland, and numerous universities and conferences in the U.S.

 

Invited Lecturer in 1988 at the London School of Economics, Manchester Business School, University of Glasgow, Strathclyde University, University of Lancaster, and the North Atlantic Accounting Conference in Amsterdam.

 

Elected for a two-year term (1988/1990) as Academic Vice President of the American Accounting Association.

 

Elected as Vice-President (1989/90) and President (1990/91) of the South Texas Chapter of the Financial Executives Institute.

 

Invited Lecturer, Advanced Studies Institute, Portugal 1988, Sponsored by NATO.

 

Visiting Scholar Award by the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada (Summer, 1981).  I spent the summer in residence at the University of Waterloo.  A similar award was offered by the University of Manitoba for summer 1984.

 

Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor, Trinity University.

 

Peat, Marwick, Mitchell and Co. Professor, The Florida State University (1978-1982).

 

Nicholas M. Salgo Endowed Chair - University of Maine (1968-1978).

 

Outstanding Professor 1981/82 by the Minority Business Students Association, Florida State University (1978-1982)

 

Named Outstanding Professor in 1978 by the Graduate Student Association of the University of Maine.

 

The 1976 Recipient of the $1,500 Presidential Research Award (by the President of the University of Maine) (Statement included near the end of this Resume).

 

Named Outstanding Professor in 1976 by the Graduate Student Association at the University of Maine.

 

Admitted as a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies in Behavioral Research at Stanford, California.  The fellowship was for the (1971-72) year at full salary at Stanford University in a "think-tank."  Other Fellows are noted scientists from diverse fields.

 

Returned to the Center for Advanced Studies in Behavioral Sciences for the 1974-75 academic year on a Guggenheim Fellowship.

 

I consider it an honor when professors show up at my doorstep to “shadow” me while I work.  Apart from visitations of one or two days, there have been more extended shadows ranging from Professor E. Thomas Robinson from the University of Alaska who shadowed me for two weeks in 1995 to, Professor Brian Zwicker from Alberta who shadowed me for nine weeks in 1995.  There have been a number of such shadows over the years, highlighted by Professor Masao Takutani from Seiki University in Tokyo who shadowed me for ten months.

 

 

Ford Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Award (Not accepted because of other fellowships).

 

Arthur Anderson Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship.

 

Delta Sigma Pi Scholarship and Leadership Award.

 

Alpha Kappa Psi Outstanding Scholarship Award.

 

Beta Alpha Psi Outstanding Student Award.

 

Beta Gamma Sigma Honorary.

 

Phi Kappa Phi Honorary.

 

Colorado Society of Certified Public Accountants Outstanding Student Award, 1961.

 

Graduated Summa Cum Laude

 

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Experimentation in Teaching & Technology

In the past several years I have conducted hundreds of workshops at universities in the U.S., Canada, Sweden, Belgium, Finland, The Netherlands, Germany, and the United Kingdom on how to utilize hypermedia and computer network technologies to improve instructional programs. In addition, I have presented similar multimedia shows at various conferences around the world.

In 1997 I developed the new ACCT 5342 Accounting Information Systems course for our new MS in Accounting degree program at Trinity University. The course development is a special challenge given the chaotic transformations of database and information technologies to networking, especially intranets and extranets. The course materials are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5342/index.htm

In 1997 I developed the new ACCT 5341 International Accounting Theories course for our new MS in Accounting degree program at Trinity University. The course materials are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/index.htm

In 1994 I converted the Trinity University Catalog and the Advisors' Handbook into hypermedia CD-ROMs that are now available also through the IBM Kiosk for Education.

In 1993 I was asked to develop and teach on a regular basis the MGMT Computers in Business course. This entailed developing a new course on information networking, word processing, spreadsheet constructions, and hypermedia authoring via Multimedia ToolBook.

In 1990 I shifted heavily into computer projection teaching and designed customized animated graphics displays for most of my lectures in Accounting Theory (Acct 370), Cost/Managerial (Acct 331), and significant modules for international accounting, philosophy seminars, careers in accounting, and a tutorial on HyperGraphics programming.

Devised ethics module for cost and managerial accounting courses, including a video presentation to be implemented beginning in Fall 1987.

Participated in design of an entirely new M.B.A. curriculum at Trinity University.

Participated in the redesign of a basic studies curriculum at Trinity University.

Developed a graduate Managerial Accounting course for Trinity University.

Developed a Doctoral Seminar in Behavioral Accounting Research at Florida State University. I was involved in a complete business curriculum revision for conversion from the quarter system to the semester system.

Developed new lecture materials which attempt to present quantitative methods in a different manner and with newer types of models (e.g., cluster analysis).

Participated in curricula development in various committee assignments e.g., Graduate Advisory Committee and Graduate Board.

Developed an extensive computerized bibliography and encyclopedia of applications of quantitative methods in business and other fields. To date it contains over 300,000 records which can be efficiently searched using computer terminals on campus.

Developed the BA 100 Field Experience course in which Junior and Senior Business students may receive from one to six credits for supervised field experience business and management. Students must have prior approval, submit weekly on-the-job reports, an oral report, and a final written project.

Developed and taught new graduate quantitative method courses for the MBA Program: BA 322 (Operations Research) and BA 301 (Quantitative Analysis for Business).

Designed new mathematics and statistics core courses (Ms 13, 14, 15 and 16 for undergraduate majors in Business Administration at the University of Maine).

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Noteworthy Research

( 1) Extensive database on hypertext and hypermedia applications in accounting programs around the world. In 1995, my research along these lines has taken me into research on the impacts of information networks and hypermedia on corporate financial reporting. Among other things, I am converting Sears Roebuck, IBM, and Apple Corporation annual reports into desktop recorded hypermedia CD-ROM interactive reports. A particular focus has been on derivative financial instruments. I have been developing new ways of accounting for interest rate and foreign currency swaps.

(2) Petrea Sandlin and I conducted an international survey of the progress of technology on accounting faculty. The report of the results was then expanded to become a reference guide to faculty seeking to author hypermedia teaching and research materials. It is available as a book entitled Electronic Teaching and Learning: Trends in Adapting to Hypertext, Hypermedia, and Networks in University Accounting Education (Denton, TX: Center for Education Technology in Accounting, University of North Texas).

( 3) Scaling of human judgments particularly from paired comparison response matrices by comparison response matrices by eigenvector eigenvector scaling techniques. Applications include: matrix scaling of risk in state-contingent claims models, international investment risk premium measurement, scaling of subjective probabilities for economic forecasts, scaling of audit risks, scaling of social impacts, and various other applications.

( 4) Derivation of economic rates of return from accounting and cash recovery rates of return.

( 5) Scaling of audit risks and choice of audit techniques (with Efrim Boritz at the University of Waterloo).

( 6) Scaling of expert judgment regarding choice of analytical review procedures in audit engagements (with C. Edward Arrington and William Hillison of Florida State University).

( 7) "Cross Impact probability Analysis and Related Subjective Forecasting Methods." This study entails other projects in various stages of completion.

( 8) "Reciprocal Cost Analysis and Capacity Utilization." This paper argues that for most planning purposes the costs of goods and service must reflect the costs of capacity as well as the various costs of production. These costs are considered in a reciprocal service setting in which the capacities of the service departments are constrained. A linear programming model is used to formulate the simultaneous determination of the service costs including the costs of capacity.

A general parametric programming approach is then formulated which provides formulas for rapid calculation of the impacts of decisions. It is shown how cost increases may paradoxically cause reciprocal cost decreases and how revenue increases may paradoxically increase reciprocal costs.

A suggestion is then made that a full cost calculation of service costs may provide useful proxies of the opportunity costs of the internally generated service activities.

( 8) "Quantitative Methods in Science, Humanities, Medicine, Engineering, Law and Business," (1968 to present). This is an extensive computerized encyclopedia (to date about 3,000 technical terms) and bibliography (to date over 300,000 records), where bibliographic references are numerically coded to encyclopedia terms.

( 9) PHANTASMAGORIC ACCOUNTING: The Measurement of Economic, Social, and Environmental Impact of Corporate Business (Published in 1977). Chapter 1 - Introduction; Chapter

2 - Backdrop of Evolving Societal Pressures and Corporate Social Impact; Chapter 3 - Review of Current Efforts in Accounting for Corporate Social Responsibility; Chapter

4 - Social Cost Measurement Intractabilities: An Air Pollution Illustration of Phantasmagoria; Chapter 5 - Corporate Social Impact Checklist and Major Issues; Chapter 6 - Quest for Types: Condensation, Display, and Numerical Taxonomy; Chapter 7 - Analysis of Human Response: A research Frontier in Social Accounting; Chapter 8 - Utopian Paradoxes: Liberty Versus Restraint.

(10) REVIEW OF FORECASTS: Scaling and Analysis of Expert Judgments Regarding Cross-Impacts of Assumptions on Business Forecasts and Accounting Measures (Published in 1983). Chapter 1 - Assumption Analysis: Introduction and Background Review; Chapter 2 - Introduction to Futurism; Chapter 3 - Cross Impact Extensions and Models; Chapter 4 - Futurism in Accounting and Auditing: The Search for and Analysis of Underlying Assumptions Impacts: The Search for and Analysis of Underlying Assumptions Impacts: The Analytic Hierarchy Process Versus Multivariate Subject Composition; Chapter 6 - ABC Variety Drugs Inc. Case Study of Optical Services Market Share Scenarios; Chapter 7 - Suggestions for Future Research.

(11) Critical analysis of Capital Asset Pricing Model, Arbitrage Pricing Theory, and Options Pricing Model approaches to multiperiod risk adjustment in capital budgeting.

(12) New approaches to risk analysis in capital budgeting: Risk allocation method and risk equivalency method.

(13) Parametric programming for reciprocal cost analysis.

(14) Investment diversification strategy implications of market risk adjustment in time state preference models.

(15) International investment risk analysis - a new approach.

(16) Electronic classroom of the future paper series.

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Working Papers Not Yet Published

"The Mexcobre Case:  Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments and Hedging Activities," Working Paper 275, Trinity University.  See http://WWW.Trinity.edu/~rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133sp.htm

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Papers Published or Accepted for Publication

94
“An Analysis of the Evolution of Research Contributions by The Accounting Review: 1926-2005,” (with Jean Heck), Accounting Historians Journal, Volume 34, No. 2, December 2007, pp. 109-142.

 

93
“Fair Value Accounting in the USA,” in The Routledge Companion to Fair Value and Financial Reporting edited by Peter Walton, (Routledge, 2007, pp. 300-321)

 

92
“A Theory of Interest Rate Swap Overhedging,” (with Angela Huang), forthcoming in Managerial Finance.

 

91
"The Application of SFAS 133, Paragraph 168 --- Using a Firm Commitment Hedged With a Forward Contract as an Example," (with Angela Huang), Derivatives Reports. 2005, See Case 3 at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/0000KPMG/ 

 

90
“Infectious Greed in the Capital Markets and Corporate Accounting,” Journal of Information Systems, Fall 2004, pp. 129-131.  This contains a compendium my book reviews and commentaries on capital markets fraud that the Editor invited me to prepare for the Fall 1004 issue. 

 

89
”Testing and Accounting for Hedge Ineffectiveness Under FAS 133, (with Angela L.J. Huang), Derivatives Report, February 2003, pp. 1-10.  http://www.riahome.com/estore/detail.asp?ID=TDVN

 

88
“FMA Online Roundtable on Current Issues Related to Enron and Arthur Andersen,” Financial Management Association,
April 24, 2002 --- http://www.fma.org/FMAOnline/ConferenceCall.htm
Panelists: Julia Grant, Robert Jensen, Rebecca McEnally

87
”Accountancy in Turmoil:  Picking Up the Pieces,” Edited by Peter Firmin, School of Accountancy, Daniels College of Business, University of Denver, July 2002, pp. 3-4.

86
“Customized Financial Reporting, Networked Databases and Distributed File Sharing," by Robert E. Jensen and Jason Zezhong Xiao, Emerging Practices in Cost Management (Warren, Gorham, & Lamont Professional Publishing Division, Research Institute of America Inc., Forthcoming).  This is a reprint of an article appearing in Accounting Horizons, September 2001

85
"Implementation of SFAS 138, Amendments to SFAS 133," The CPA Journal, November 2001. (With Angela L.J. Huang and John S. Putoubas), pp. 54-56 --- http://www.nysscpa.org/cpajournal/2001/1100/dept/d115401.htm 

84
“Customized Financial Reporting, Networked Databases and Distributed File Sharing," Accounting Horizons, September 2001, pp. 209-222.

83
"An Essay on Technology in the Classroom: Are You Willing to Be Blissfully Out of Date?," New Faculty Handbook, Teaching and Curriculum Section of the American Accounting Association, 2001.  See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm and http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/aen/winter01/fd03.htm 

82
"FAS 133 As Amended and "DIGGED":  Highlights of FAS 138 and Some Key DIG Issues," Derivatives Report, September 2000, pp. 8-17.  

81
”An Explanation of Example 5, Cash Flow Hedge of Variable-Rate Interest Bearing Asset in SFAS 133,” by Carl M. Hubbard and Robert E. Jensen, Derivatives Report, April 2000, pp. 8-13.
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/133ex05.htm 
The Excel workbook is at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/133ex05a.xls

79
”The Receive Fixed/Pay Variable Interest-Rate Swap in SFAS 133, Example 2, Needs An Explanation:  Here It Is,” by Carl M. Hubbard and Robert E. Jensen, Derivatives Report, November 1999, pp. 6-11.
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/294wp.doc 
The Excel workbook is at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/133ex02a.xls 

78
"Risks of CPA Assurance of WebTrustSM Electronic Seals and of DataTrust Privacy of Cookie Jars" (with John Howland), Academic Practitioner Casebook for the Year 1998, published by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). This case was part of a two-case package selected as winners in a case writing competition sponsored by the AICPA. On November 7, 1998 I presented this case at the AICPA Educators Conference, McLean, Virginia..

77
"The Bombay Martini Bet: How Did a CPA’s Assurance Team Crack the Security System of a High Tech Client? " (with Bruce Sidlinger), Academic Practitioner Casebook for the Year 1998, published by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA).  This case was part of a two-case package selected as winners in a case writing competition sponsored by the AICPA.On November 7, 1998 Bruce Sidlinger and I jointly presented this case at the AICPA Educators Conference, McLean, Virginia.

76
"Windows to the World," an invited paper by Sheila Handy, Editor of Business Education Forum. The paper will be published in 1999.

75.
"Networked Databases: Past, Present, and Future," The Review of Accounting Information Systems," Volume 2, Spring 1998.

74.
"Online Texbooks:  Interview Excerpts from Instructor versus Students," College Press Service, March 9, 1998, Volume 9, Number 53, 5-6.

73.
"Academic Lesson Authoring for Intranets and the WWW," CETA, Volume 3, No. 2, Center for Education Technology in Accounting, September 1996 pp. 5-7.

72.
"Monumental Emerging Techologies," CETA, Volume 3, No. 1, Center for Education Technology in Accounting, December 1995 pp. 5-7.

71.
"The Paridigm Shift in Technology: Financial Reporting Will Never Be the Same," (with Petrea Sandlin) Research on Accounting Ethics, Volume 3, 1997, 191-209.

70.
"Who's Doing It? Sources of Public and Private Computer Aided Learning Materials for Accounting Educators," Journal of Accounting Education, with Petrea Sandlin, Vol. 13, No. 2, Spring 1995, 119-148.

69.
Electronic Teaching and Learning: Trends in Adapting to Hypertext, Hypermedia, and Networks in University Accounting Educatio
n (1995 Edition ), With Petrea Sandlin, (Denton, TX: Center for Education Technology in Accounting, University of North Texas, 1995). This is a 900-page book that is also available on the Internet via the Pacioli Network at Loyola College in Maryland

68.
"Who's Doing It? Sources of Public and Private Computer-aided Learning Materials for Accounting Educators," The Journal of Accounting Education, 1995, Vol 13, 119-148. (with Petrea Sandlin).

67.
"The Good and the Bad: Elation With Frustration," CETA, Center for Education Technology in Accounting, December 1995.

66.
"Corporate Reporting in the Electronic Age," Proceedings of the Conference on Ethics in Accounting, State University of New York at Binghamton, 1994.

65.
"Technology, Teaching, and the Future," The Teaching Professor, Volume 8, Number 3, March 1994, 7-8.

64.
"A Modern Theory of Finance Analysis of Differences Between Accounting Versus Economic Rates of Return" Capital Budgeting Under Uncertainty: New and Advanced Perspectives, Edited by Raj Aggarwal (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1993, pp. 42-72)

63.
"Ordinal Data AHP Analysis: A Proposed Coefficient of Consistency and a Nonparametric Test," With Thomas E. Hicks, Mathematical and Computer Modelling, Volume 17, No. 4/5, 1993, pp. 135-150.

62.
"The Technology of the Future is Already Here," Academe, Volume 79, Number 4, July/August 1993, pp. 2-13.

61.
"Undergraduate Student Research Programs: Are They as Viable for Accounting as They are in Science, Humanities, and Other Business Disciplines?"(With Professors Peter A. French and Kim R. Robertson of Trinity University), Critical Perspectives on Accounting , Volume 3, 1992, 337-357.

60.
"How to Do It? Getting Started in Authoring Computer-Aided Teaching/Instruction and What Software Features to Consider," (With Petrea Sandlin), The Journal of Accounting Education, Vol 10, 1992, 61-93.

59.
"Why Do It? Advantages and Dangers of New Waves of computer-Aided Teaching/Instruction," (With Petrea Sandlin), The Journal of Accounting Education, Vol. 10, 1992, 39-60.

58.
"Lack of Robustness and Systematic Bias in Cash Recovery Rate methods of Deriving Internal" (Economic) Rates of Return for Business Firms, (With Carl Hubbard), Journal of Accounting and Public Policy, Vol. 10, Fall 1991, 225-242.

57.
"The Electronic Classroom: New Technology Brings Freshness and Immediacy to the Lecture Hall," (With Petrea Sandlin), New Accountant, Vol. 7, No. 2, October 1991, 29-31.

56.
"Reconciliation of Learning Rates Between the Cumulative Average Versus Incremental Learning Rate Models," Scandinavian Journal of Management, Vol. 7, No. 2, 1991, 137-142.

55.
"An Analysis of Contributors to Accounting Journals Part II: The Individual Academic Journals," (with Louis Heck and Philip Cooley), The International Journal of Accounting, Vol.26, 1991, pp. 1-17.

54..
"An Analysis of Contributors to Accounting Journals. Part I: The Aggregate Perfformances," (with Louis Heck and Philip L. Cooley), The International Journal of Accounting, Vol.25, 1990, pp. 202-217. Released in 1991.

53.
"Working Within Neoclassical Theory and `Modern Theory' of Finance to Detect and Measure Monopoly Power Components of Ex Post Accounting Rate of Return," Critical Perspectives on Accounting, Vol. 1, 1990, pp. 69-101.

52.
"The Debate on Whether Client Management Should Negotiate Audit Contracts: Yuppies Versus Puppies Versus Guppies," Advances in Public Interest Accounting Vol. 3, 1990, pp. 43-70.

51.
"Efficiency Variance Reapportionment Among Reciprocating Departments: Some Extensions for Future Research," Contemporary Accounting Research, Vol. 5, Fall 1988, 250-266.

50.
"International Investment Risk analysis: Extensions for Multinational Corporation Capital Budgeting Models," Mathematical Modelling, Vol. 9, 1987, 265-284.

49.
"A Dynamic Analytic Hierarchy Process Analysis of Capital Budgeting Under Stochastic Inflation Rates and Risk Premiums," Advances in Financial Planning and Forecasting, Vol. 2, 1987, 269-302.

48.
"Extension of Consensus Methods For Priority Ranking Problems: Eigenvector Analysis of 'Pic-the-Winner' Paired Comparison Matrices," Decision Sciences, Vol. 17, Spring 1986, 195-211.

47.
"The Befuddled Merchant of Venice: More on the 'Misuse' of Accounting Rates of Return Vis-a-Vis Economic Rates of Return," Advances in Public Interest Accounting, Vol. 1, 1986, 113-165.

46.
"Accounting Education: Turning Wrongs Into Rights in the 1980s," Essays on Accounting Education (Harrisonburg, VA: Center for Research in Accounting Education, James Madison University, pp. 3-21). With C. Edward Arrington of the University of Iowa.

45.
"Matrix Scaling of Subjective Probabilities of Economic Forecasts: An Empirical Study," Economics Letters, Vol. 20, 1986, 221-225. With Roger W. Spencer of Trinity University Economics Department.

44.
"Capital Budgeting Under Risk and Inflation: A Pedagogical Guide," Advances in Accounting, Vol. 3, 1986, 255-279.

43.
"The Times are Changing," New Accountant, Vol. 1, September 1985 (Lead Article in a New Journal, 7-14. With John D. Rice of The Trinity University Business Administration Department.

42.
"An Alternative Scaling Method for Priorities in Hierarchial Structures," Journal of Mathematical Psychology, Vol. 28, No. 3, September 1984, 317-332.

41.
"Analytic Hierarchy Process Multivariate Analysis of Expert Judgment Regarding Alternative Analytical Review Procedures: An Empirical study," with C.E. Arrington and W.A. Hillison, Journal of Accounting Research, Vol. 22, No. 1, Spring 1984, 298-312.

40.
"Social Accounting Versus the Tin Lizzie," Monograph Four of the Academy of Accounting Historians, J.F. Gaertner, Editor, 1984.

39.
"Aggregation (Composition) Schema for Eigenvector Scaling of Priorities in Hierarchial Structures," Multivariate Behavioral Research, Vol. 18, January 1983, 63-84.

38.
Review of Forecasts: Scaling and Analysis of Expert Judgments Regarding Cross-Impacts of Assumptions of Business Forecasts and Accounting Measures
, (Sarasota, FL: American Accounting Association, 1983).

37.
"Accounting Education in the 1980's" with C. Edward Arrington, The Journal of Accounting Education, Vol. 1, Number 1, Spring 1983, 1-15. This was an invited lead article in a new journal.

36.
"Scaling Multivariate performance Criteria: Subjective Composition Versus the Analytic Hierarchy Process," with C.E. Arrington and Masao Takutani (of Seiker University in Japan), Journal of Accounting and Public Policy, Vol. 1 Winter 1982, 95-125.

35.
"On the Determination of the Cost of Intermediate Goods and Services," with Rene Manes and Soong Park (both from the University of Illinois), The Accounting Review, Vol. 47, No. 3, July 1982, 594-606.

34.
"Competition in Auditing: An Assessment" in Symposium on Auditing Research IV (Urbana, IL: The Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois, 1982, 451-468).

33.
"Accounting Futures Analysis: An Eigenvector Model for Subjective Elicitations of Variations in Cross-Impacts Over Time," Decision Sciences, January 1982, Vol. 13, 15-37.

32.
"Scenario Probability Scaling: An Eigenvector Analysis of Elicited Scenario Odds Ratios," Futures, December 1981, Vol. 13, 489-98.

31.
"The Evaluation of Generic Cross-Impact Models: A Revised Balancing Law for the R-Space Model," Futures, June 1981, 217-220.

30.
"Rocks, Snails, and Rabbits: Academic Versus Practitioner Research Expectations in the Standard Setting Process," Accounting Research Convocation, Published by the University of Alabama, 1981.

29.
"Creative Research in Accounting," S.E. Graduate Workshop, University of South Carolina, April 17, 1980, published in Proceedings, 1980.

28.
"A Dynamic Programming Algorithm for Cluster Analysis," Mathematical Programming in Statistics, Edited by Arthanari and Dodge, New York, John Wiley & Sons.

27.
"FANTASYLAND ACCOUNTING RESEARCH: Let's Make Pretend..." The Accounting Review, Vol. 54, January 1979, 189-196.

26.
"ARISA: Corporate Social Performance," in Tuck Today, The Amos Tuck Graduate School of Business, Dartmouth College, 1979.

25.
"Quantitative Methods in Management Accounting," The Accounting Journal, Winter 1978, 244-277.

24.
"Social Accounting Versus the Tin Lizzie," The Relevance of History to Contemporary Accounting Issues (New York: New York University, 1978, 21-32).

23.
"Optimal Allocation of Joint (Common) Costs: A Parametric Programming Approach," Decision Sciences, Vol. 9, July 1978, 436-451.

22.
PHANTASMAGORIC ACCOUNTING: Research and Analysis of Economic, Social and Environmental Impact of Corporate Business
(Sarasota, FL: The American Accounting Association, 1977).

21.
"Truth Versus Fiction Versus Something," The Accounting Review, Vol. L, October 1975, No. 4, 871-874.

20.
"Report of the Committee on Social Cost," The Accounting Review, Supplement to Vol. XLX, 1975, 50-90.

19.
"An Experimental Design for Study of Effects of Accounting Variations in Decision Making," in Research for Business Decisions: An Interdisciplinary Approach, Eli Peace Cos III, Editor (Austin, Texas: Bureau of Business Research, 1975), 136-150.

18.
"Report of the Committee on Social Cost," The Accounting Review, Supplement to Vol. XLIX, 1974.

17.
"The Multicollinearity Trap," Journal of Systems Management, Vol. 23, No. 2, February 1972, 28-35.

16.
"Report of the Committee on Measures of Effectiveness for Social Programs," The Accounting Review, Supplement to Vol. XLVII, 1974.

15.
"A Review of Information for Management Decisions: A System for Economic Analysis and Accounting Procedures," The Accounting Review, Vol. XLVI, No. 2, April 1971.

14.
"A Cluster Analysis Study of Financial Performance of Selected Business Firms," The Accounting Review, Vol. XLVI, No. 1, January 1971, 36-56.

13.
"Report of the Committee on Non-Financial Measures of Effectiveness," The Accounting Review, Supplement to Vol. XLVI, 1971, 165-212.

12.
"Logic and Sanctions in Accounting: Critique," Accounting in Perspective, R.R. Sterling and W.F. Bents, Eds., Southwestern Publishing Company, Cincinnati, Ohio, 1971, 38-50.

11.
"Empirical Evidence from the Behavioral Sciences: Fish Out of Water," The Accounting Review, Vol. XLV, No. 3, July 1970, 502-508.

10.
"Sensitivity Analysis and Integer Linear Programming," Management Planning and Control, J.L. Livingston, Eds., McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York, 1970, 361-392.

Discussion Portions in The Behavioral Aspects of Accounting Data for Performance Evaluation, T.J. Burns, Ed., Published by College of Administrative Science, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, 1970.

9.
"A Discussion of Comparative Values and Information Structures," in Empirical Research in Accounting: Selected Studies 1969, Journal of Accounting Research Supplement, University of Chicago, 1970, 168-181.

8.
"A Dynamic Programming Algorithm for Cluster Analysis," The Journal of Operations Research, Vol. 17, No. 6, November-December 1969.

7.
"A Discussion of the Effects of Information Feedback Frequency," Empirical Research in Accounting: Selected Studies 1967, Journal of Accounting Research Supplement, University of Chicago, 1968.

6.
"An Experimental Study of the Effects of Accounting Variations in Security analysis and Portfolio Selections," Mississippi Valley Journal of Business and Economics, Vol. IV, No. 1, Fall 1968, 1-20.

5.
"Sensitivity Analysis and Integer Linear Programming," The Accounting Review, Vol. XVIII, No. 3, July 1968, 425-446.

4.
"Review of Decision Mathematics," The Accounting Review, Vol. XLIII, No. 2, April 1968, 397-398.

3.
"Statistical Analysis in Cost Measurement and Control," (with Carl T. Thomsen), The Accounting Review, Vol. XLIII, No. 1, January 1968, 93.

2.
"An Experimental Design for Study of Effects of Accounting Variations in Decision Making," The Journal of Accounting Research, Vol. IV, No. 2, Autumn 1966, 224-238.

1.
"Need for Statistics in Auditing Procedures," A Summa Cum Laude Paper, Western Business Review, Vol. IV, No. 4, November 1960, 27-32.

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Return to the Table of Contents

Presentations on College Campuses & at Conferences

372
“Education Technology Updates,” Accounting Educators Conference sponsored by the Mississippi State Society of CPAs, Jackson, Mississippi on October 25, 2007:  Host: Wayne Nix of Mississippi College. My presentation materials for this day-long session are available at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/EdTech/

371
“Accounting for Derivatives,” Workshop Conducted for the Center for Professional Education, Inc., Radisson Lord Baltimore Hotel, August 24, 2007 in Baltimore, Maryland:  Host:  Pete Nerozzi, Conference/Seminar Operations, CPE, Inc., 370 Reed Road, Suite 227, Broomall, PA 19008
. My presentation materials for this day-long session are available at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Calgary/CD/

372
“Accounting for Fair Values,” Workshop Conducted for the Center for Professional Education, Inc., Hilton Hotel, July 9, 2007 in Irvine, California:  Host:  Pete Nerozzi, Conference/Seminar Operations, CPE, Inc., 370 Reed Road, Suite 227, Broomall, PA 19008
My presentation materials for this day-long session are available under “Fair Value” at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Calgary/CD/

371
“Accounting for Derivatives,” Workshop Conducted for the Center for Professional Education, Inc., Crown Plaza Hotel, June 6, 2007 in Dallas, Texas:  Host:  Pete Nerozzi, Conference/Seminar Operations, CPE, Inc., 370 Reed Road, Suite 227, Broomall, PA 19008

370
“Accounting for Derivatives,” Workshop Conducted for the Center for Professional Education, Inc., Embassy Suites Hotel, December 7, 2006 in Rye, New York:  Host:  Pete Nerozzi, Conference/Seminar Operations, CPE, Inc., 370 Reed Road, Suite 227, Broomall, PA 19008

369
“Accounting for Derivatives,” Workshop Conducted for the Center for Professional Education, Inc., Embassy Suites Hotel in   Crystal City, Virginia, November 3, 2006:  Host:  Pete Nerozzi, Conference/Seminar Operations, CPE, Inc., 370 Reed Road, Suite 227, Broomall, PA 19008

368
“Whether Certain Firm Commitment Contracts are Scoped Into FAS 133,” on October 8, 2006 for Oil Combinations, Inc., 70 Walnut Street, Wellesley, MA  02481. Host:  Manny Palumbo.
email: oci@oci-1987.com

 

367
“Workshop on IAS 39” Caribbean Society of Chartered Accountants, Ambassador Hotel, Trinidad, February 15-16, 2006:  Host: David Raggay david.raggay@ifrs-consultants.com

366
“Accounting Fraud – Global Experiences and their Implications for the Caribbean,” Governance, Accountability, and Performance:  An international accounting conference, Sponsored by ACCA, Crowne Plaza Hotel, Trinidad, November 16, 2005:  Host: David Raggay
david.raggay@ifrs-consultants.com

365
“Accounting for Derivatives:  FAS 133 and Beyond,” Workshop Conducted for the Center for Professional Education, Inc., Hyatt Bethesda, April 19, 2005:  Host:  Pete Nerozzi, Conference/Seminar Operations, CPE, Inc., 370 Reed Road, Suite 227, Broomall, PA 19008

364
”Workshop on Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments,” ATOFINA Petrochemicals, Inc., Houston, April 27-28, 2004.  Host:  Jim Parks 

363
”Overview of FAS 133,” April 27, 2004, Valero Energy Corporation in San Antonio.  Host:  Pepper Wilson http://www.valero.com/

362
”2004 Price Risk Management Course:  Managing Risk in Turbulent Markets,” March 24-26, 2004 in Calgary/Banff, Canada.  Host:  R.J. O’Brien www.rjobrien.com

361
"Update on Financial Accounting Standards," Southern Gas Association Accounting & Financial Executives Conference, April 28, 2003 in San Antonio, Texas.  Host:  Bruce Narzissenfeld

360
"The Crisis in Accountancy," Kent State University and the Ohio Council of the Institute of Management, April 18, 2003 in Kent, Ohio.  Host:  Norman Meonske

359
”CASB School Review,” Chartered Accountancy School of Business, March 3-5 in Calgary, Canada.  Host:  John Brennan

358
”CASB School Review,” Chartered Accountancy School of Business, March 3-5 in Vancouver, Canada.  Host:  John Brennan

357
"Accounting for Intangibles and Internet Reporting," Pre-conference Workshop, 14th Asian Pacific Conference on International Accounting Issues, November 22, 2002 in Los Angeles.  Host:  Ali Peyvandi --- http://www.craig.csufresno.edu/apc/ 

356
"The Future of the Accounting Profession:  Part 2," Virginia Institute of CPAs Educator Conference in Virginia Beach, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, November 20, 2002.  Host:  Konrad Kubin

355
"Advances in Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments," Florida Institute of CPAs Educator Conference, The University of South Florida, October 24-25, 2002 in Tampa.  Host:  Gary Holstrum

354
" What Critical Factors Determine Pedagogical Success Versus Failure?," Florida State Society Educators' Conference, Indian Rocks Beach, Florida, October 4, 2002:  Host:  Deborah Pendarvis 

353
"The Future of the Accounting Profession:  Part 1," Virginia Institute of CPAs Educator Conference in Roanoke, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, September 30, 2002.  Host:  Konrad Kubin

352
"Advances in Technology for Accounting Education," Fifth International Congress on Innovations in Teaching Accounting and Business, September 19, 2002 in Guanajuato City, Mexico. Host: Professor Salvador Ruiz-de-Chavez

351
"Accounting for Intangibles and Internet Reporting: Teaching Modules That Can Be Plugged Into Accounting Courses, Auditing Courses, and Electronic Commerce Courses," American Accounting Association 2002 Annual Meetings, August 14, 2002 in San Antonio. --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/cepSanAntonio

350
"What Critical Factors Determine Pedagogical Success Versus Failure? The Highly Successful Online MBA Courses at Duke University and the University of Connecticut and How Material Provided to Students in Classrooms Should Be Revised for Online Students," Workshop No. 1, American Accounting Association 2002 Annual Meetings, August 13, 2002 in San Antonio --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/cepSanAntonio.htm 

349
"Trends in Distance Education," International Accounting Conference Hosted by Niagara University and Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Niagara Falls, Canada, August 9, 2002.  Host:  Linda Kidwell

348
"Accounting Scandals in the United States:  Impacts on the World," The University of Augsburg,: Augsburg, Germany, June 18, 2002.  Host:  Dr. Adolph Coenenberg

347
"Accountancy Profession in a Crisis: Worldwide Trends and Options for the Future," The 2002 European Applied Business Research Conference,: Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Germany, June 17, 2002.  Host:  Ron Clute

346
Workshop on Distance Education," Mercer University, November 9, 2001, Atlanta.  Host:  Cassie F. Bradley

345
"Plenary Session Entitled EDUCACION E INSTRUCCION SIN FRONTERAS," Fourth International Congress on Innovations in Teaching Accounting and Business, Benemerita Universidad Autonoma, August 30, 2001, Puebla, Mexico.  Host:  Professor Salvador Ruiz-de-Chavez

344
"Educational Issues in FAS 133:  Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments and Hedging Activities," Texas Society of CPAs Educator Seminar," Airport Hilton Hotel, Austin, Texas, October 19, 2001:  Host  Roselyn Morris

343
"Good Versus Bad Online Content for Learning: How the Pros Design, Author, Test, and Deliver Knowledge Portals and Online Courses for Prestigious Universities and Online Supplements for Publishing Companies," Continuing Education Program Workshop at the 2002 Annual Meetings of the American Accounting Association, Atlanta, August 11, 2001.  This is an all-day workshop on August 11.  

342
"Cross Border Business of Education in the 21st Century," Third Globalization Conference Sponsored Jointly by the American Accounting Association and Schmalen