Determinants of Judgment Performance By: Lea Sulaiman Saputra D1555.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Advertisements

Integrating the NASP Practice Model Into Presentations: Resource Slides Referencing the NASP Practice Model in professional development presentations helps.
Evidence & Preference: Bias in Scoring TEDS-M Scoring Training Seminar Miami Beach, Florida.
Presented by YOUR NAME THE DATE
Auditing Concepts.
Dd. This learning session will help the auditor: Design audit objectives understand why audit criteria are used in performance audits; learn how to develop.
Learning Objectives LO1 Summarize the financial statement audit process. LO2 Explain the main characteristics of an independent audit engagement. LO3 Describe.
Learning Objectives LO5 Document an accounting system to identify key controls and weaknesses in order to assess control risk. LO6 Write key control tests.
Discussion on SA-500 – AUDIT EVIDENCE
Welcome! Internal Auditing CHAPTER 1. Definition Internal auditing is an independent, objective, assurance and consulting activity designed to add value.
International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants Internal Audit Bob Franchini Paris June
PwC David Devlin 23 April 2002 Auditor Independence in a Global Market Place.
International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board Accounting Estimates, Including Fair Value Accounting Estimates, and Related Disclosures ISA Implementation.
9.401 Auditing Chapter 1 Introduction. Definition of Auditing The accumulation and evaluation The accumulation and evaluation Of evidence about information.
Appraisal and Development of Information Systems Audit Staff By: Lea Sulaiman Saputra D1555.
Internal Control in a Financial Statement Audit
Fall 2014 Kate Walker, Vice President for Finance and Treasurer
Audit Planning and Documentation
SAFA- IFAC Regional SMP Forum
Critical Thinking in Nursing. Definition  Critical thinking is an active, organized, cognitive process used to carefully examine one’s thinking and the.
Safety and Health Programs
ISA 220 – Quality Control for Audits of Historical Financial Information
Financial Audit Autonomous Bodies Internal Control and Risk Assessment Session Internal Control and Risk Assessment.
Norm Theory and Descriptive Translation Studies
Auditing & Assurance Services, 6e
Learning Objectives LO1 Describe the role of professional judgment in achieving the overall objectives of the independent auditor in conducting an audit.
Learning Objectives LO1 Distinguish between management and auditor’s responsibilities regarding an auditee organization’s internal controls. LO2 Explain.
Internal Auditing and Outsourcing
7 - 1 Copyright  2003 Pearson Education Canada Inc. CHAPTER 7 Audit Planning and Documentation.
Audit objectives, Planning The Audit
Sustainable Procurement & Life Cycle Analysis Heather Pearce 9 th February 2010.
Internal Control in a Financial Statement Audit
Chapter 7 Auditing Internal Control over Financial Reporting McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved.
Audit Risk. "Audit risk" means the risk that the auditor gives an inappropriate audit opinion when the financial statements are materially misstated Audit.
© 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd.
Internal Control in a Financial Statement Audit
S7: Audit Planning. Session Objectives To explain the need for planning To explain the need for planning To outline the essential elements of planning.
Chapter 3 Audit Planning, Types of Audit Tests, and Materiality McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Evaluation of Internal Control System
What is a Business Analyst? A Business Analyst is someone who works as a liaison among stakeholders in order to elicit, analyze, communicate and validate.
Audit Planning. Session Objectives To explain the need for planning To outline the essential elements of planning process To finalise the audit approach.
1 Kingsley Karunaratne, Department of Accounting, University of Sri Jayewardenepura, Colombo - Sri Lanka Practice Management.
Evaluation of Internal Control System. Learning Objective 1 Contrast management’s need for internal control with the auditor’s need to consider internal.
Practice Management Quality Control
Auditing: The Art and Science of Assurance Engagements Chapter 7: Materiality and Risk Copyright © 2011 Pearson Canada Inc.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. 6-1 Chapter 6 CHAPTER 6 INTERNAL CONTROL IN A FINANCIAL STATEMENT AUDIT.
Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 6-1 Chapter Six Internal Control in a Financial Statement Audit.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 7-1 Chapter 7: Audit Planning and Documentation.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © The McGraw-Hill Companies 2010 Auditing Internal Control over Financial Reporting Chapter Seven.
OVERVIEW THE AUDIT PROCESS Overview of the Audit Process.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 9-1 Chapter 9: Internal Controls and Control Risk.
Tom McBride.  This report on the PPIR Project proposes a way of defining and formally recognising how professional engineers interact with, and respond.
Chapter 9 Audit Sampling – Part a.
1 Overview of PCAOB Auditing Standard No. 5 An Audit of Internal Control Over Financial Reporting that is Integrated with an Audit of Financial Statements.
Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
FDIC Perspective on Environmental Risk Presented by: Gordon Stoner Legal Division Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation May 6, 2008.
ICAJ/PAB - Improving Compliance with International Standards on Auditing Planning an audit of financial statements 19 July 2014.
AUDIT QUALITY AND ASSURANCE 2 ND AND 3 RD OCTOBER 2014 HILTON HOTEL ANALYTICAL PROCEDURES 1.
Canberra Chapter July PMI Chapter Meeting July 2007 PMCDF Competence Framework A presentation by Chris Cartwright.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © The McGraw-Hill Companies 2010 Internal Control in a Financial Statement Audit Chapter Six.
AUDIT STAFF TRAINING WORKSHOP 13 TH – 14 TH NOVEMBER 2014, HILTON HOTEL NAIROBI AUDIT PLANNING 1.
Chapter 6 Internal Control in a Financial Statement Audit McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Internal Control Chapter 7. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. 7-2 Summary of Internal Control Definition.
Types of tests Risk Assessment Procedures – Auditors use the results of risk assessment procedures to determine the type and amount of further audit.
PLANNING, MATERIALITY AND ASSESSING THE RISK OF MISSTATEMENT
CHAPTER 7 Audit Planning and Documentation
© 2013 by Nelson Education Ltd.
Internal control - the IA perspective
OBJECTIVE AND GENERAL PRINCIPLES GOVERNING AN AUDIT OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Lecture 2.
Internal Control Internal control is the process designed and affected by owners, management, and other personnel. It is implemented to address business.
Presentation transcript:

Determinants of Judgment Performance By: Lea Sulaiman Saputra D1555

Auditor’s Ability Whenever we seek to make a judgment about the level of asset safeguarding or data integrity maintained, we need to recognize that as humans we have various inheren cognitive strengths and limitations. Our cognitive abilities affect the quality of the judgments we will make.

Unfortunately, research has also shown that we use heuristics that sometimes do not lead to high quality judgment. On the one hand, these heuristics play a useful role in reducing the costs associated with decision making. On the other hand, they can also lead to decision making biases that undermine the quality of our audit judgment.

Auditor’s Knowledge Although the knowledge acquired from both sources overlaps to some extent, important differences also arise. Probably, however, you need to have direct experience of these institutions to have well developed knowledge of the inherent risks associated with them.

The education and training and the experience received can also be general or specific. You might also have carried out a large number of audits of these types of financial institution.

As we might expect, both general and specific knowledge play a part in determining the quality of audit judgments. For many audits, the level of general knowledge could be an important determinant of the decision quality when making asset safeguarding and data integrity judgments. For example, the organization we are auditing might not be complex and it might also be representative of many other types of organizations we are auditing increases, however, the complexity associated with the judgments we must make also increases. As a result, we need to have more specialized knowledge if we are to make high quality judgments.

Whenever auditors make the asset safeguarding and data integrity evaluation judgment, therefore, they should evaluate whether their knowledge is appropriate for the judgments they must make. They will require some level of general knowledge to e competent to make a judgment. In some cases, however, auditors might also require a high level of specialized knowledge to be able to make a competent judgment. Moreover, auditors must recognize that the knowledge they need has to be specialized in terms of the particular audit they are undertaking. Many research studies have shown that human are often expert only in a fairly narrow domain. If auditors conclude they do not seek to find someone who is competent to make the judgment.

Audit Environment The audit environment describes the context in which auditors must make their evaluation judgment. Potentially, many characteristics of the environment might bear on auditor judgment processes.

The firs is the audit technology that auditors can use to guide and support their audit judgment. We are using the term here in a broad sense. It includes elements like the internal control questionnaires used to structure the evaluation of internal controls, the audit standards and policies used to guide the conduct of audits, the expert systems used to help in evaluations, the way we structure audit teams to try to improve the quality of the audit and the ways we document our findings to try to facilitate our making a final judgment. Auditors use this technology to try to overcome some of the deficiencies in their judgment processes and to extend their cognitive abilities.

The second environmental characteristic is group processes. One of the interesting features of the audit profession in that is uses groups extensively during the conduct of an audit; it does not rely on individual persons to make judgments. Unfortunately, research in auditing is only just beginning to provide us with some understanding of why group processes in auditing might be useful and why, therefore, auditors are likely to have incorporated group processes into their work. For example, interactions within a group might enable the members of the group to recall better the audit evidence that has been collected and to better evaluate the importance of this evidence.

Third environmental characteristic is prior involvement in an audit.

The fourth environmental characteristic is accountability. Auditors are accountable for their work in many different ways. For example, they are accountable to their supervisors and their clients and they will also be held accountable for their work under the law. The positive aspect of accountability is that it should motivate auditors to try to make high quality judgments whenever they evaluate asset safeguarding and data integrity.

Auditor’s Motivation Auditors need to be mindful of how their level of motivation can affect the quality of their decision making processes.