Managerial Accounting, 13e,
Garrison, Noreen, Brewer
After studying Chapter 1, you should be able to:
|
LO1 |
Understand the role of management
accountants in an organization. |
|
LO2 |
Understand the basic concepts underlying
Lean Production, the Theory of Constraints (TOC), and Six Sigma. |
|
LO3 |
Understand the importance of
upholding ethical standards. |
After studying Chapter 2, you should be able to:
|
LO1 |
Identify the major differences and
similarities between financial and managerial accounting. |
|
LO2 |
Identify and give examples of each
of the three basic manufacturing cost categories. |
|
LO3 |
Distinguish between product costs and
period costs and give examples of each. |
|
LO4 |
Prepare an income statement
including calculation of the cost of goods sold. |
|
LO5 |
Prepare a schedule of cost of
goods manufactured. |
|
LO6 |
Understand the differences between
variable costs and fixed costs. |
|
LO7 |
Understand the differences between
direct and indirect costs. |
|
LO8 |
Understand cost classifications
used in making decisions: differential costs, opportunity costs, and sunk
costs. |
|
LO9 |
(Appendix 2A) Properly account for
labor costs associated with idle time, overtime, and fringe benefits. Optional |
|
LO10 |
(Appendix 2B) Identify the four
types of quality costs and explain how they interact. Optional |
After studying Chapter 3, you should be able to:
|
LO1 |
Distinguish between process
costing and job-order costing and identify companies that would use each
costing method. |
|
LO2 |
Identify the documents used in a
job-order costing system. |
|
LO3 |
Compute predetermined overhead
rates and explain why estimated overhead costs (rather than actual overhead
costs) are used in the costing process. |
|
LO4 |
Understand the flow of costs in a job-order
costing system and prepare appropriate journal entries to record costs. |
|
LO5 |
Apply overhead cost to Work in
Process using a predetermined overhead rate. |
|
LO6 |
Prepare schedules of cost of goods
manufactured and cost of goods sold. |
|
LO7 |
Use T-accounts to show the flow of
costs in a job-order costing system. |
|
LO8 |
Compute underapplied or
overapplied overhead cost and prepare the journal entry to close the balance
in Manufacturing Overhead to the appropriate accounts. |
After studying Chapter 4, you should be able to:
|
LO1 |
Record the flow of materials, labor,
and overhead through a process costing system. |
|
LO2 |
Compute the equivalent units of
production using the weighted-average method. |
|
LO3 |
Compute the cost per equivalent
unit using the weighted-average method. |
|
LO4 |
Assign costs to units using the
weighted-average method. |
|
LO5 |
Prepare a cost reconciliation
report. |
After studying Chapter 5, you should be able to:
|
LO1 |
Understand how fixed and variable
costs behave and how to use them to predict costs. |
|
LO2 |
Use a scattergraph plot to
diagnose cost behavior. Lab Assignment |
|
LO3 |
Analyze a mixed cost using the
high-low method. |
|
LO4 |
Prepare an income statement using
the contribution format. |
|
LO5 |
(Appendix 5A) Analyze a mixed cost
using the least-squares regression method.
Lab Assignment |
After studying Chapter 6, you should be able to:
|
LO1 |
Explain how changes in activity affect
contribution margin and net operating income. |
|
LO2 |
Prepare and interpret a
cost-volume-profit (CVP) graph and a profit graph. |
|
LO3 |
Use the contribution margin ratio (CM
ratio) to compute changes in contribution margin and net operating income
resulting from changes in sales volume. |
|
LO4 |
Show the effects on contribution
margin of changes in variable costs, fixed costs, selling price, and volume. |
|
LO5 |
Determine the level of sales
needed to achieve a desired target profit. |
|
LO6 |
Determine the breakeven point. |
|
LO7 |
Compute the margin of safety and
explain its significance. |
|
LO8 |
Compute the degree of operating leverage
at a particular level of sales and explain how it can be used to predict
changes in net operating income. |
After studying Chapter 7, you should be able to:
|
LO1 |
Explain how variable costing
differs from absorption costing and compute unit product costs under each
method. |
|
LO2 |
Prepare income statements using both
variable and absorption costing. |
|
LO3 |
Reconcile variable costing and
absorption costing net operating incomes and explain why the two amounts
differ. |
|
LO4 |
Understand the advantages and
disadvantages of both variable and absorption costing. |
After studying Chapter 9, you should be able to:
|
LO1 |
Understand why organizations
budget and the processes they use to create budgets. |
|
LO2 |
Prepare a sales budget, including
a schedule of expected cash collections. |
|
LO3 |
Prepare a production budget. |
|
LO4 |
Prepare a direct materials budget,
including a schedule of expected cash disbursements for purchases of
materials. |
|
LO5 |
Prepare a direct labor budget. |
|
LO6 |
Prepare a manufacturing overhead
budget. |
|
LO7 |
Prepare a selling and
administrative expense budget. |
|
LO8 |
Prepare a cash budget. |
|
LO9 |
Prepare a budgeted income
statement. |
|
LO10 |
Prepare a budgeted balance sheet. |
After studying Chapter 10, you should be able to:
|
LO1 |
Prepare a flexible budget. |
|
LO2 |
Prepare a report showing activity
variances. |
|
LO3 |
Prepare a report showing revenue
and spending variances. |
|
LO4 |
Prepare a performance report that
combines activity variances and revenue and spending variances. |
After studying Chapter 11, you should be able to:
|
LO1 |
Explain how direct materials
standards and direct labor standards are set. |
|
LO2 |
Compute the direct materials price
and quantity variances and explain their significance. |
|
LO3 |
Compute the direct labor rate and
efficiency variances and explain their significance. |
|
LO4 |
Compute the variable manufacturing
overhead rate and efficiency variances. |
|
LO5 |
Compute delivery cycle time,
throughput time, and manufacturing cycle efficiency (MCE). |
|
LO6 |
(Appendix 11A) Compute and
interpret the fixed overhead budget and volume variances. |
After studying Chapter 12, you should be able to:
|
LO1 |
Prepare a segmented income
statement using the contribution format, and explain the difference between
traceable fixed costs and common fixed costs. |
|
LO2 |
Compute return on investment (ROI)
and show how changes in sales, expenses, and assets affect ROI. |
|
LO3 |
Compute residual income and
understand its strengths and weaknesses. |
After studying Chapter 13, you should be able to:
|
LO1 |
Identify relevant and irrelevant
costs and benefits in a decision. |
|
LO2 |
Prepare an analysis showing whether
a product line or other business segment should be dropped or retained. |
|
LO3 |
Prepare a make or buy analysis. |
|
LO4 |
Prepare an analysis showing
whether a special order should be accepted. |
|
LO5 |
Determine the most profitable use of
a constrained resource and the value of obtaining more of the constrained
resource. |
|
LO6 |
Prepare an analysis showing
whether joint products should be sold at the split-off point or processed
further. |
After studying Chapter 14, you should be able to:
|
LO1 |
Evaluate the acceptability of an
investment project using the net present value method. |
|
LO2 |
Evaluate the acceptability of an
investment project using the internal rate of return method. |
|
LO3 |
Evaluate an investment project
that has uncertain cash flows. |
|
LO4 |
Rank investment projects in order
of preference. |
|
LO5 |
Determine the payback period for
an investment. |
|
LO6 |
Compute the simple rate of return
for an investment. |
|
LO7 |
(Appendix 14A) Understand present
value concepts and the use of present value tables. |