Graduates’ perception of career success and skill emphasis in accounting programme in Nigerian institutions: An exploratory study

Although a great deal of studies on skills expected of accounting graduates have been conducted in industrially advanced countries, interest of researchers in developing economies is recent.Accordingly, this study explores measures of career success and the perceptions regarding the level of emphas...

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Main Authors: Mustafa, Murtala Oladimeji Abioye, Shittu, Abdul Jaleel Kehinde
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute for Management and Business Research (IMBRe), Universiti Utara Malaysia 2012
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Online Access:http://repo.uum.edu.my/20690/1/JBMA%202%202%202012%2049%2064.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/20690/
http://imbre.uum.edu.my/images/jbmavol2dis/Graduates-perception-of-career-success-and-skill.pdf
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spelling my.uum.repo.206902017-01-18T08:24:34Z http://repo.uum.edu.my/20690/ Graduates’ perception of career success and skill emphasis in accounting programme in Nigerian institutions: An exploratory study Mustafa, Murtala Oladimeji Abioye Shittu, Abdul Jaleel Kehinde HF5601 Accounting Although a great deal of studies on skills expected of accounting graduates have been conducted in industrially advanced countries, interest of researchers in developing economies is recent.Accordingly, this study explores measures of career success and the perceptions regarding the level of emphasis given to both technical and generic skills in Nigerian tertiary institutions from the perspective of accounting graduates.The study is motivated by concerns of scholars and call by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria.Based on data obtained from 192 graduates, salary and frequency of promotion are perceived to be stronger measure of career success while technical skills; business, computing and ethical skills; interpersonal and problem solving skills as well as communication skills emerged as four components of skills taught and it was found that more emphasis was placed on technical skills at the cost of other skills.The findings from this study will have implications for accounting education in developing countries in general and Nigeria especially. Institute for Management and Business Research (IMBRe), Universiti Utara Malaysia 2012 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://repo.uum.edu.my/20690/1/JBMA%202%202%202012%2049%2064.pdf Mustafa, Murtala Oladimeji Abioye and Shittu, Abdul Jaleel Kehinde (2012) Graduates’ perception of career success and skill emphasis in accounting programme in Nigerian institutions: An exploratory study. Journal of Business Management and Accounting (JBMA), 2 (2). pp. 49-64. ISSN 2231-9298 http://imbre.uum.edu.my/images/jbmavol2dis/Graduates-perception-of-career-success-and-skill.pdf
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
building UUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Utara Malaysia
content_source UUM Institutionali Repository
url_provider http://repo.uum.edu.my/
language English
topic HF5601 Accounting
spellingShingle HF5601 Accounting
Mustafa, Murtala Oladimeji Abioye
Shittu, Abdul Jaleel Kehinde
Graduates’ perception of career success and skill emphasis in accounting programme in Nigerian institutions: An exploratory study
description Although a great deal of studies on skills expected of accounting graduates have been conducted in industrially advanced countries, interest of researchers in developing economies is recent.Accordingly, this study explores measures of career success and the perceptions regarding the level of emphasis given to both technical and generic skills in Nigerian tertiary institutions from the perspective of accounting graduates.The study is motivated by concerns of scholars and call by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria.Based on data obtained from 192 graduates, salary and frequency of promotion are perceived to be stronger measure of career success while technical skills; business, computing and ethical skills; interpersonal and problem solving skills as well as communication skills emerged as four components of skills taught and it was found that more emphasis was placed on technical skills at the cost of other skills.The findings from this study will have implications for accounting education in developing countries in general and Nigeria especially.
format Article
author Mustafa, Murtala Oladimeji Abioye
Shittu, Abdul Jaleel Kehinde
author_facet Mustafa, Murtala Oladimeji Abioye
Shittu, Abdul Jaleel Kehinde
author_sort Mustafa, Murtala Oladimeji Abioye
title Graduates’ perception of career success and skill emphasis in accounting programme in Nigerian institutions: An exploratory study
title_short Graduates’ perception of career success and skill emphasis in accounting programme in Nigerian institutions: An exploratory study
title_full Graduates’ perception of career success and skill emphasis in accounting programme in Nigerian institutions: An exploratory study
title_fullStr Graduates’ perception of career success and skill emphasis in accounting programme in Nigerian institutions: An exploratory study
title_full_unstemmed Graduates’ perception of career success and skill emphasis in accounting programme in Nigerian institutions: An exploratory study
title_sort graduates’ perception of career success and skill emphasis in accounting programme in nigerian institutions: an exploratory study
publisher Institute for Management and Business Research (IMBRe), Universiti Utara Malaysia
publishDate 2012
url http://repo.uum.edu.my/20690/1/JBMA%202%202%202012%2049%2064.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/20690/
http://imbre.uum.edu.my/images/jbmavol2dis/Graduates-perception-of-career-success-and-skill.pdf
_version_ 1644283028011220992
score 13.214269