A brief outline of Our Services

Finance & Business Seminars

A selection of 2-3 day intensive financial & business seminar courses, covering 12 topics, with locations offered Worldwide.  From introductory courses, to senior management level.  Also available as in-house training.

 

Accountancy & Finance Job Board
A specialist Accountancy and Finance job board, offering the latest vacancies throughout the UK, spanning 20 industry categories.

 

Financial Industry News Provider
Links to 8 seperate financial news channels and information providers, offering a covered view of laterst industry changes and global events,

 

ACCA Study Materials
Authors and Publishers of affordable ACCA Study Materials provided to students globally in electronic format for a more cost-effective method of learning.

 

ACCA Forum - Business & Finance
An active forum for discussion with like-minded peers in the industry, to network ideas, questions and problems.

Study ACCA

Click here to return to full list of Tony Surridge news ARCHIVES

One in 10 accountancy students sign up for an exam may never sit them, according the research undertaken by PQ magazine. The worry is that the accountancy bodies are just taking the fees and the true pressures on the PQ are never recognised. So what should the bodies being doing – taking the money or providing counselling about how professional exams work?

The worry is that the bodies have set up a system where they are dependent on student fees to ‘service members’. In effect members through ‘elected’ councils take the money from vunerable students to spend on themselves!
 
PQ asked the bodies for their current stats, because despite our asking the oversight body POBA, they weren’t asking the question, and didn’t seemed that interested either.
 
Well, according to the AAT the average number of ‘absences for the last four sittings is 6.3%. CIMA revealed that this varies from level-to-level and paper-to-paper. Work commitments are seen as the biggest reason why students sign up and then are unable to sit. In some papers the non-turn up rate is as high as 10%, but at strategic level this is much lower and almost non-existent at TOPCIMA.
 
For the ICAEW no-shows at the advanced stage exams are typically low, less than 1%, however this figure doesn’t include people who withdraw in advance of the exam.
 
CIPFA don’t have these figures available and the ACCA said this information ‘is not in the public domain’. Our question is why not!

see more at www.pqaccountant.com
 
23/11/2009