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Organizing tax instruction: Evidence regarding how students organize tax knowledge
Institution:1. Department of Finance, University of Texas at Austin, 2110 Speedway, B6600, Austin TX 78712, USA;2. Economic Research, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, 230 South LaSalle Street, Chicago IL 60604, USA;3. Department of Economics, Duke University, 419 Chapel Drive, Durham NC 27708, USA;4. Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary, 2500 University Dr NW, Calgary AB T2N 1N4, Canada;1. Department of Economics, University of Birmingham, University House, Birmingham B15 2TT, United Kingdom;2. Department of Economics, Carleton University, Loeb Building, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6, Canada;3. Research Department, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, P.O. Box 27622, Richmond, VA 23261, United States;2. University of Minnesota, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, CAERP, CEPR, NBER, Minneapolis, MN, USA
Abstract:An important part of accounting curriculum reform is a movement away from traditional methods of organizing accounting courses toward improved organization schemes. Two basic approaches to organizing the content of tax courses are a transaction-based scheme and an entity-based scheme. This paper reports the results of an experiment that investigates which scheme is more consistent with how incoming masters in tax students organize tax knowledge and how different schemes affect the manner in which graduating students organize tax knowledge. Ninety students drawn from two full-time masters in taxation programs participated in the study. Subjects individually completed three separate tasks that measured how they organize tax knowledge at both the start of their degree program and three semesters later at or near the end of their program. The results for all three tasks indicate that incoming tax students organize tax knowledge around the type of transaction involved. The results for two of the three tasks indicate that the students' transaction focus did not change during their graduate tax program, whereas the results for the third task indicate that the students' transaction focus increased during their graduate tax experience. The implications of these findings for improving tax instruction are discussed.
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