isn't your training provider supposed to supply one if you don't have one yourself?
I'm sure that I read somewhere that AAT have 8 or 9 set scenarios for those who are not able to provide their own.
Have a word with your Kaplan trainer about the standard case studies that they should have.
Shaun.
p.s. I'm with Tim. I wondered why you were going ICAS rather than ICAEW! lol (fun (!) fact ICAS is older than ICAEW).
__________________
Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
I did this earlier in the year with BPP and they had a sample report in the text book they sent. Also, the textbook had a chapter for each chapter of the report which pretty much had all the answers in it. The case study had such obvious errors that you won't have any trouble finding enough to write about!
I did it a chapter at a time and the tutor gave feedback on what needed changing. Then you resubmit that chapter along with the next one and it gets looked at again. By the time you get to the last chapter your report is almost complete. Then there is another final run through by the tutor. The only trouble i had was keeping within the word count.
So don't panic. Read through the stuff you've been given, just focus on the first bit you have to give in. Then the next one etc. It will be fine. It's actually probably easier than most of the exams, just a bit time consuming. And a bit annoying that you get into it, write a section then have to wait a few weeks to get the feedback by which time you've forgotten about it all and have to start reading it all again!
At £14.25 it has to be worth an investment if it gets you over the final hurdle.
All the best matey,
Shaun.
p.s. whats Santa bringing you?
__________________
Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
How long are the exams? I haven't sat any but will have to get my bum in gear in the new year and bit the bullet and do them. I hate exams which is why I haven't got that far yet.
The old skills test were 4 hours long and I hated them!
Thats one heck of a lot of book for 60p. I've got the 12th edition. definitely not toilet paper material.... Although with all of the other books that I've needed to read mine hasn't had the attention that it really deserved being used only for reference rather than read cover to cover (must put that one back on the reading list).
know what you mean about no money being left when it gets to yourself. My pressy is just going to be the Costner Wyatt Earp which is one that's been in my Amazon basket for a couple of years... Of course, everything else that I want my youngest is getting so I get to watch it anyway (including dark knight rises and Battleship). Shame Dredd wasn't out before Christmas.
We don't have blue ray yet as the TV is only a 720p plasma so no point getting bluerays until that breaks and we move up to a 1080p.
The drury book relates well to the ACCA syllabus and is recommended reading right up to P5 so you're going to get a lot of use out of that one. My version of that one is 6th edition.
Another book that you are going to need is Exploring Corporate Strategy by Johnson Scholes and Whittington. To my mind they live in the shadow of Michael Porter but the JSW book is required reading for P1, P3 and P5 and advised reading before that.
That one is a ridiculously expensive book so a good idea to keep an eye out over the next year or so for one coming up cheap amongst the resellers. Managed to get mine for £18 and thankfully it was an unmarked near perfect copy (much better than coffing up £55 for it). Oh, make sure that you get the text and cases version. Not sure if they still produce the cheaper text only version but if they do that's not what you want.
For whacking Gangloins though accept no substitute for the Kaplan ACCA study text for paper P6 (6 cm thick!)
__________________
Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
JSW doesn't have to be that recent and to be honest I have no intention of upgrading mine from 7th edition.... Maybe you set 7th as your benchmark and try to get newer than that.
But.... Learn the work of Michael Porter before reading JSW as you will understand where much of their thinking came from.
The difference with JSW is that they bring lots of ideas together in a single volume.
Difference between Cima and ACCA....
Everything in the CIMA syllabus is in the ACCA one plus ACCA has additional emphasis on financial accounting (including the evil P2 which is officially the most difficult paper of any accounting body (and is even referred to as "the beast")).
Back in the 90's it was assumed that to be a management accountant you went down the CIMA route and a financial one down the ACCA path however, in business there has ceased to be preference given to one over the other.
I don't think that CIMA leaving the CCAB party did them any favours and may, at the time, have worked to ACCA's advantage (although I feel that such history is now behind them).
Cima is a serious quality qualification and is more lenient towards people working in a self employed capacity than the ACCA with the restrictions placed by regulation 8. For those just setting out it is often seen as the simpler and shorter of the two options although once started it will prove anything but simple.
If you want to work in practice ACCA wins over CIMA. (which is not to say that there are not CIMA people in practice doing every bit as well as ACCA ones).
If you want to work in industry there is little difference between the two
Same with consultancy.
Like yourself I enjoy the management accounting side of things (as proven by my far higher scores in those papers... Then again, that is more likely due to the world I come from (no, not the planet Zarg, I meant banking)) but in the real world I like it to be part of my services rather than being the thrust of them as working in industry is all about meetings and infighting.
I want to get things done not debate for three months over countless powerpoint presentations with people who just want to be paid (a lot) whilst avoiding doing anything. (as the old idea is that you don't get fired if you are busy doing nothing. Failed projects get you noticed, never starting the project in the first place apparently gets you promotion).
If you want to make a lot of money then industry is the way to go.
If you want to avoid the urge to walk into the office on a Monday morning with a loaded M16 (#1) and a backpack full of spare Ammo clips then go for working in practice.
hope that helps,
Shaun.
#1 or AK47, bit like the ACCA / CIMA debate as to which one is best for the job!... Although according to Samuel L. Jackson in Jackie Brown, "AK47. If you've absolutely, positively got to kill every M***********r in the room, accept no substitute!".
__________________
Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
Going back a while now but best thing i found at the time was to do the best i could with my first draft, get it to my assessor and work from the feedback given.
I completed my ICAS in June of this year and I agree it was much harder than the exams - & boy did I winge about them! I studied BPP for all my modules apart from ICAS for which I used KAPLAN mainly due to the fact that BPP's next start date was too far away. I used the case study and tbh like you didn't have a clue where to start. KAPLAN did supply an example report and there was lots of help on the AAT Forum. In the end I put something together which I was totally unhappy with but submitted it and the feedback from my Tutor really was invaluable. In the end it took 3 attempts and I really wouldn't build your hopes up to banging it out in a week. Feedback came back within the prescribed time and once final was approved was uploaded to AAT very promptly but I think you will be disappointed if you expect to get it done in a week.
Best of luck with it - it really is worth it in the end.