FOUNDATIONS OF ACCOUNTING
| Institution | TVET |
| Course | Diploma in Social Wo... |
| Year | 1st Year |
| Semester | Unknown |
| Posted By | stephen |
| File Type | |
| Pages | 58 Pages |
| File Size | 1.07 MB |
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Description
Definition Accounting is defined as the process of identifying, measuring and
reporting economic information to the users of this information to permit informed
judgment
Many businesses carry out transactions. Some of these transactions have a financial
implication i.e. either cash is received or paid out. Examples of these transactions
include selling goods, buying goods, paying employees and so many others.
Accounting is involved with identifying these transactions measuring (attaching a
value) and reporting on these transactions. If a firm employs a new staff member then
this may not be an accounting transaction. However when the firm pays the employee
salary, then this is related to accounting as cash involved. This has an economic
impact on the organization and will be recorded for accounting purposes. A process is
put in place to collect and record this information; it is then classified and
summarized so that it can be reported to the interested parties.
The main purpose of Accounting is to provide financial information about an
economic entity. It provides a means where the steward reports to the owner how the
funds entrusted to him are used to enhance the wealth of the business.
Business Transaction is an event which involves the transfer of money or money‘s
worth of financial events. The following summarises the business transaction that a
firm might have:
Acquisition of assets from owners and other creditors
Investing resources in assets to produce goods or services
Using resources to produce goods and services
Selling goods or services of the firm
Paying those to whom money is owned
Returning assets to owners
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SPH 302 LESSON 5: Heat engines and the Carnot cycle
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A heat engine, or more simply, an engine, is a device that extracts energy from its environment in the form of heat and does useful work. At the heart of every engine is a working substance. In a steam engine, the working substance is water, in both its vapor and its liquid form. In an automobile engine, the working substance is a gasoline–air mixture. If an engine is to do work
on a sustained basis, the working substance must operate in a cycle; that is, the working substance must pass through a closed
series of thermodynamic processes, called strokes, returning again and again to each state in its cycle.
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SPH 302 LESSON 6: Helmholtz and Gibbs free energy
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Gibbs free energy, also known as the Gibbs function, Gibbs energy, or free enthalpy, is a quantity that is used to measure the
maximum amount of work done in a thermodynamic system when the temperature and pressure are kept constant. Gibbs free
energy is denoted by the symbol ‘G’. Its value is usually expressed in Joules or Kilojoules.
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SPH 302 LESSON 7: Thermodynamic potentials
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Thermodynamic potentials are state functions that, together with the corresponding equations of state, describe the equilibrium
behavior of a system as a function of so-called “natural variables”. The natural variables are a set of appropriate variables that
allow to compute other state functions by partial differentiation of the thermodynamic potentials.
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SPH 302 LESSON 8: Equillibrium between phases
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The generic phase diagram of a substance in the P-T coordinates is shown in figure 8.1a and b. Every point of this diagram is an equilibrium state. Different states of the system in equilibrium are called phases. The lines dividing different phases are called the coexistence curves. Along these curves, the phases coexist in equilibrium, and the system is macroscopically inhomogeneous. All three coexistence curves can meet at the triple point.
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UCI 301 LESSON 1: INTRODUCTION TO PROJECT MANAGEMENT
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Projects are a group of activities that have to be performed with limited resources to yield specific objectives, in a specific time, and in a specific locality. Thus, a project is a
temporary endeavor employed to create a unique product, service or results. Projects are an investment on which resources are used to create assets that will produce benefits over an expanded period of time.
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UCI 301 LESSON 2: PROJECT LIFECYCLE
Good project management deals with three factors: time, cost and performance. Projects are successful if they are completed on time, within budget, and to performance requirements. In order to bring the many components of a large project into control there is a large toolkit of techniques, methodologies, and tools.
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UCI 301 LESSON 3: PROJECT PLANING
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Project planning defines the project activities and deliverables that will be performed and describes how the activities will be accomplished. The purpose of project planning is to define each major task, estimate the time and resources required and provided a framework management review and control.
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UCI 301 LESSON 4: FEASIBILITY STUDY
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A feasibility study is essentially a process for determining the viability of a proposed initiative or service and providing a framework and direction for its development and delivery. It is a process for making sound decisions and setting direction.
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UCI 301 LESSON 6: SOFTWARE COST ESTIMATION
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Estimates are made to discover the cost, to the developer, of producing a software system. You take into account, hardware, software, travel, training, overheads and effort costs. There is not a simple relationship between the development cost and the price charged to the customer.
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UCI 301 LESSON 7: SOFTWARE CONFIGURATION MANAGEMENT
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Software configuration management is an umbrella activity that is applied throughout the software process. Because change can occur at any time, SCM activities are developed to;
1. Identify change
2. Control change
3. Ensure that change is being properly implemented
4. Report change to others who may have an interest
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