Exam 2: Cognitive Processes and Ethical Decision Making in Accounting

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The importance of framing the ethical issue in the decision making model is:

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Assume you were assigned a term paper and decided to surf the web to identify a provider of papers for a fee. You chose what you thought was the best paper available. With respect to Rest's model of morality it can be said that:

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As an executive in a mid-sized manufacturing firm, Cal finds himself thrown together with Harry, who works for a different unit of the firm. He and Harry are in the same community; their children are in the same schools; they often show up at the same social functions; and they play golf together fairly frequently. One day, to Cal's deep dismay, he hears that Harry had been implicated in some financial irregularities at work. The issues while serious leave some room for doubt. There is reason to think Harry got ensnared by regulations, though he may have afterwards tried to cover up that entanglement by being less than forthright. Cal has heard from Harry that he was uncomfortable with the way he handled one of the contentious matters. Using Kohlberg's model of moral development, explain what Cal should do with the information he has discovered about Harry.

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In the Better Boston Beans case, what is the ethical dilemma facing Cindie?

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Keesha is the CEO of a publicly-owned company. She was informed by the CFO that the company's earnings were down 30 percent from the prior year due to the recession. The company's stock price has declined by 20 percent. The CFO comes up with a scheme to hide debt and inflate revenues by selling underperforming assets to a special purpose entity affiliated with the company. Keesha is concerned about possible effects on the creditors but ultimately she agrees to the accounting. Keesha is reasoning at:

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Each of the following considerations should help to evaluate alternative courses of action in the decision making model except for:

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In reference to Rest's four-component Model of Morality, which component reflects an individual's willingness to place ethical values ahead of non-ethical values that relate to self-interest?

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Rest's "Four Component Model of Morality" can best be described as:

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The actions of Diem-Thi Li best illustrate

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Rosie is the external auditor of Texas Two Steps, a privately-owned dance company in Texas. Rosie believes the owner of the company is skimming cash off the top. She approaches the owner who explains that the money will be replaced in the following month after he refinances his house. Rosie accepts the owner's explanation but reclassifies the expenditure as a receivable of the company from Rosie. Rosie's reasoning best reflects:

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How does the "ethical domain" in accounting and auditing influence professional judgment?

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Explain how virtue interacts with moral development in Thorne's Integrated Model of Ethical Decision Making.

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Moral sensitivity can be summarized as

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What are the implications of reasoning at stages 3 and 4?

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Wanda is faced with an ethical dilemma. She knows her supervisor, the CFO, wants to accelerate the recoding of revenue to an earlier period to "make the numbers," but Wanda is convinced this would violate GAAP. If Wanda reasons at stage 4 of Kohlberg's model she is most likely to:

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When Sally is asked why she should share her toys with her sister, she responds by saying "Because my mom says I have to and if I don't I'll go to time-out." In which stage of moral development is Sally?

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The ethical decision making model described in the chapter helps to:

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Each of the following is an element of the operational issues to be considered in the decision making model except for the:

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The ethical domain in accounting and auditing refers to:

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In stage 1 of Kohlberg's model, ethical reasoning is motivated by:

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