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Actions500 Ways to Achieve Your Highest Score
We want you to succeed on the regulation portion of the CPA Exam. That's why we've selected these 500 questions to help you study more effectively, use your preparation time wisely, and get your best score. These questions are similar to the ones you'll find on the CPA Exam so you will know what to expect on test day. Each question includes a concise, easy-to-follow explanation in the answer key for your full understanding of the concepts. Whether you have been studying all year or are doing a last-minute review, McGraw-Hill: 500 Regulation Questions for the CPA Exam will help you achieve the high score you desire.
Sharpen your subject knowledge, strengthen your thinking skills, and build your test-taking confidence with:
- 500 CPA Exam-style questions
- Full explanations for each question in the answer key
- A format parallel to that of the CPA Exam
Denise M. Stefano, CPA, CGMA, MBA, is an assistant professor of accounting and the accounting program chairperson with Mercy College. She has served as president and is a board member for a chapter of the New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants.
Darrel Surett, CPA, taught accounting, business law, and income tax courses for 25 years as an adjunct professor at Union County College. He is a partner in the CPA firm of Barry Surett & Co.
For freshman-/sophomore-level courses in Music Theory, Musical Skills, or Sight Singing.
Featuring over 300 rhythmic studies in simple musical forms, with short preliminary exercises-this text introduces students to the basic processes and complexities of musical rhythm and helps them develop the ability to perform all kinds of rhythmic patterns accurately at sight. Suitable not only for reading, but for dictation, improvisation, and composition; the collection contains one- and two-part rhythmic studies-mostly 12 to 16 measures long-that are intended to be sung, spoken, and tapped or clapped.
'Teach these boys and girls nothing but Facts. Facts alone are wanted in life. Plant nothing else, and root out everything else'
Dickens's novel honouring the value of the human heart in an age of materialism centres on Coketown, where Mr Thomas Gradgrind, school owner and model of Utilitarian success, feeds his pupils and his family with facts, banning fancy and wonder from young minds. As a consequence his obedient daughter Louisa becomes trapped in a loveless marriage, and his son Tom rebels to become embroiled in crime. As their fortunes cross with those of a free-spirited circus girl and a victimized weaver, Gradgrind is forced to question everything he believes in.
Edited with an Introduction and notes by KATE FLINT
For courses in Ethics and Law, Critical Issues in Criminal Justice and Social Issues in Criminal Justice.
This comprehensive, accessible collection of essays raises compelling questions on morality and the judicial system that are designed to stimulate students' awareness of the correct way, the moral way for those in criminal justice to conduct themselves. Addressing all participants in the system-lawyers and judges, police and probation officers, victims and the accused-the essays provide students with a thought-provoking presentation of the many issues surrounding human conflict and the role ethics and fairness play in our criminal justice system.