Docsity
Docsity

Prepare for your exams
Prepare for your exams

Study with the several resources on Docsity


Earn points to download
Earn points to download

Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan


Guidelines and tips
Guidelines and tips

ACCOUNTING INFORMATION SYSTEM, Lecture notes of Accounting

REVIEWER FOR AIS WEEK 1 KAYA NIYO NA

Typology: Lecture notes

2024/2025

Uploaded on 05/02/2025

reyna-aloria
reyna-aloria 🇵🇭

1 document

1 / 5

Toggle sidebar

This page cannot be seen from the preview

Don't miss anything!

bg1
ACCOUNTING INFORMATION SYSTEM CHAPTER 1
Information Environment
Information is a business resource.
Internal and external information flow
Internal Information Flow
Horizontal flow- used at the
operations level to capture
transactional and operations data
Vertical flow
Downward flow – instructions,
data, quotas
Upward flow – aggregated
transactions and operations
External Information Flow
Trading partners- Customer sales
and company purchase information
Stakeholders- Entities with direct or
indirect interest in the firms
Information requirement
All user groups have unique information
requirements
Level of detail and nature of
information
System- group of multiple interrelated
components or subsystems that serve a
common purpose.
Multiple components- contain more
than one part
Relatedness- common purpose
relates the multiple parts of the
system
Purpose- A system must serve at least
one purpose, but may serve several
Subsystem – a system that is viewed in
relation to a larger system which it Is a part
Example:
System decomposition- process of dividing
the system into smaller subsystem parts
System interdependency- all vital parts of a
subsystem must be functioning well or the
entire system will fail.
Information system- set of formal
procedures by which data are collected,
processed into information, and distributed
to users.
Transaction- an event that affects or is of
interest to the organization and is processed
by its information system as a unit of work.
2 Classes of Transaction
Financial transaction- Economic event that
affects the assets and equities of the
organization, is reflected in its accounts, and
is measured in monetary terms.
Non-financial transaction- Events that
meet the residual definition of a financial
transaction
Accounting information system- an event
that affects or is of interest to the
organization and is processed by its
information system as a unit of work
Identifies, collects, processes, and
communicates economic information
2024-2025
pf3
pf4
pf5

Partial preview of the text

Download ACCOUNTING INFORMATION SYSTEM and more Lecture notes Accounting in PDF only on Docsity!

Information Environment Information is a business resource. Internal and external information flow Internal Information FlowHorizontal flow - used at the operations level to capture transactional and operations data  Vertical flow Downward flow – instructions, data, quotas Upward flow – aggregated transactions and operations External Information FlowTrading partners- Customer sales and company purchase information  Stakeholders - Entities with direct or indirect interest in the firms Information requirement All user groups have unique information requirements Level of detail and nature of information System - group of multiple interrelated components or subsystems that serve a common purpose.  Multiple components - contain more than one part  Relatedness - common purpose relates the multiple parts of the system  Purpose - A system must serve at least one purpose, but may serve several Subsystem – a system that is viewed in relation to a larger system which it Is a part Example: System decomposition - process of dividing the system into smaller subsystem parts System interdependency - all vital parts of a subsystem must be functioning well or the entire system will fail. Information system - set of formal procedures by which data are collected, processed into information, and distributed to users. Transaction - an event that affects or is of interest to the organization and is processed by its information system as a unit of work. 2 Classes of Transaction Financial transaction - Economic event that affects the assets and equities of the organization, is reflected in its accounts, and is measured in monetary terms. Non-financial transaction - Events that meet the residual definition of a financial transaction Accounting information system- an event that affects or is of interest to the organization and is processed by its information system as a unit of work  Identifies, collects, processes, and communicates economic information

about a firm using a wide variety of technologies.  It captures and records the financial effects of a firm’s transactions.  Distributes transaction information to operations personnel to coordinate many key tasks. AIS subsystems process financial transactions and nonfinancial transactions that directly affect the processing of financial transactions. Management information system (mis) processes nonfinancial transactions that are not normally processed by traditional ais AIS Subsystems

  1. Transaction processing system (tps) Supports daily business operations with numerous reports, documents, and messages for users throughout the organization Consists of three transaction cycles : the revenue cycle, the expenditure cycle, and the conversion cycle
  2. General ledger/financial reporting system (gl/frs) Produces the traditional financial statements called nondiscretionary because the organization has few or no choices in the information it provides.
  3. Management reporting system (mrs) Provides internal management with special-purpose financial reports and information needed for decision making called discretionary reporting because the organization can choose what information to report and how to present it. Data- facts, which may or may not be processed and have no direct effect on the user Information- causes the user to take an action that he or she otherwise could not, or would not, have taken. Data sources - financial transactions that enter the information system from both internal and external sources.  Internal financial transactions - involve the exchange or movement of resources within the organization.  External financial transactions - economic exchanges with other business entities and individuals outside the firm. Transforming data into information (according to the general ais model)Data collection - most important stage The objective is to ensure that event data entering the system are valid, complete, and free from material errors Capture transaction data Record data into forms Validate and edit the data  Data processing  Classifying  Transcribing  Sorting  Batching  Merging  Calculating  Summarizing

2. Distributed data processing - ddp involves reorganizing it function into small information processing units (ipus) that are distributed to end users and placed under their control. Advantages  Cost reductions in hardware and data entry tasks  Improved cost control responsibility  Improved user satisfaction  Backup Disadvantages  Loss of control  Mismanagement of organization-wide resources hardware and software incompatibility  Redundant tasks and data  Consolidating incompatible activities  Hiring qualified professionals  Lack of standards Evolution of information system models 1. The manual process model- oldest and most traditional form of accounting systems. Physical events, resources, and personnel that characterize many business processes. Includes the physical task of record keeping. 2. Flat-file model (legacy system) - individual data files are not related to other files. data redundancy evident to the legacy system contributes to the following problems:  Data storage  Data updating  Currency of information  Task data dependency  Limit data integration 3. Database model- centralizes the organization’s data into a common database that is shared by other users. With the organization’s data in a central location, all users have access to the data they need to achieve their respective objectives. 4. Rea model- resources are the assets of the organization. Events are phenomena that affect changes in resources. Agents are individuals and departments that participate in an economic event.

  1. Enterprise resource planning Systems - information system model that enables an organization to automate and integrate its key business processes. Erp breaks down traditional functional barriers by facilitating data sharing, information flows, and the introduction of common business practices among all organizational users. Accountants as users of information system  Accountants must provide a clear picture of their needs to the professionals who design their systems.  The accountant should actively participate in systems development projects to ensure appropriate systems design Accountants as system designers  The accounting function is responsible for the conceptual system, while the computer function is responsible for the physical system  The conceptual system determines the nature of the information required, its sources, its destination, and the accounting rules that must be applied Accountants as system auditors External auditors - Attest to fairness of financial statements

Assurance service: broader in scope than traditional attestation audit It auditors - evaluate it, often as part of external audit Internal auditors - in-house is and its appraisal services