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ACC03043 Assessment Session 2 2017
Overview of Assessment
Assessment in this unit comprises four tasks:
Assessment Task 1 – 5%
Assessment Task 2 – 25%
Assessment Task 3 – 30%
Examination – 40%
Assessment to Meet National Accounting Learning Standard
The Australian Business Deans Council (ABDC) has issued Learning Standards for Business,
Management and Economics to meet the requirements of the Higher Education Standards
Framework Act 2011. The Learning Standards Statement for Accounting was issued in June
2016 (replacing the first edition of the Accounting Learning Standard issued in February 2011).
The 2016 version can be accessed from the following web link.
http://www.abdc.edu.au/pages/learning-standards.html
The unit ACC03043 Corporate Governance is covered by the Accounting Learning Standard
This unit is offered at the Master Degree standard and is equivalent to the Australian
Qualification Framework (AQF) Level 9 award requirements.
In this unit you will focus on meeting the requirements relating to four primary learning
outcomes.
Knowledge
Critical analysis and problem solving skills
Judgement
Communication
These learning outcomes will be assessed in the assessment tasks. The four learning
outcomes for ACC03043 have been adapted from the national standard for the Accounting
Discipline to apply to Corporate Governance.2
1. KNOWLEDGE
The foundation learning outcome is KNOWLEDGE. In this unit you will need to demonstrate
knowledge of a significant amount of information relating to corporate governance and
related areas of management theory and practice. The Master graduate needs to meet the
following national standard for Knowledge:
Integrate advanced theoretical and technical corporate governance
knowledge (which includes a selection of accounting, auditing and assurance,
finance, economics, quantitative methods, information systems, commercial
law, corporation law and taxation law) in a business context.
2. CRITICAL ANALYSIS AND PROBLEM SOLVING SKILLS
The secondary learning outcome is the development of CRITICAL ANALYSIS AND PROBLEM
SOLVING SKILLS. In this unit you will be required to demonstrate the ability to apply
knowledge about corporate governance in a range of corporate governance settings. The
Master graduate needs to meet the following national standard of Critical analysis and
problem solving skills:
Critically apply advanced theoretical and technical corporate governance
knowledge and skills to provide possible solutions to emerging and or
advanced corporate governance problems.
3. JUDGEMENT
The tertiary learning outcome is the development and exercise of professional JUDGEMENT.
In this unit you will be required to demonstrate the ability to make professional judgements
about corporate governance matters in a range of professional, business and corporate
settings. The Master graduate needs to meet the following national standard for Judgement:
Exercise judgement under minimal supervision to provide possible solutions to
emerging and/or advanced corporate governance problems in complex
contexts using where appropriate social, ethical, economic, regulatory,
sustainability, governance and / or global perspectives.3
4. COMMUNICATION
The final learning outcome assessed in this unit is the development of skills in
COMMUNICATION. In this unit you will be required to demonstrate the ability to prepare
written reports that communicate complex corporate governance issues and advice to both
professionals and non-professionals in the corporate governance field. The Master graduate
needs to meet the following national standard for Communication.
Justify and communicate corporate governance advice and ideas in complex
collaborative contexts to influence specialists and non-specialists in the
corporate governance field.
As you work on your assessment tasks make sure you consider and seek to demonstrate that
you can meet the standard for each of the above national learning outcomes for Master
graduates.
(Assessment Task 1 details commence on the next page)4
Assessment Task 1
Due Date: 5.00pm Monday 24 July 2017
Length: 250 words total (+/- 10%) Reference list and cover sheet details are
not included in this word-limit total.
Weighting: 5% of total unit marks
Assessment Criteria:
Demonstration of knowledge of the issues
High quality written communication of corporate governance concepts
Structure and professional presentation of the report
Required:
Assume you are employed in a management consulting firm and have expertise as a
corporate governance specialist. Your client is a public company listed on the
Australian Stock Exchange that has requested a one page brief (maximum 250 words)
specifying the essential criteria for a non-executive director to be appointed to the
company’s board.
The client has said; ‘Make it brief, I’m too busy to read a long document. You should
follow the ideas of former UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill who stated:
‘To do our work, we all have to read a mass of papers. Nearly all of them are
far too long. This wastes time, while energy has to be spent in looking for the
essential points. I ask my colleagues and their staff to see to it that their reports
are shorter. The aim should be reports which set out the main points in a series
of short, crisp paragraphs…’
Winston Churchill, Memo to UK War Cabinet, 9 August 1940, During the Battle of
Britain
(Assessment Task 2 details commence on the next page)5
Assessment Task 2
Due Date: 5.00pm Monday 7 August 2017
Length: 2,000 words total (+/- 10%). Reference list and cover sheet details are
not included in this word-limit total.
Weighting: 25% of total unit marks
Assessment Criteria:
Demonstration of knowledge of the issues and evidence of wide
reading to support your analysis
Demonstration of your ability to apply the knowledge to identify keys
issues leading to your recommendations
Evidence of sound reasoning and the exercise of professional
judgement to support your recommendations
Development and statement of concise recommendations for
presentation to the AICD
Overall structure and professional presentation of the report to the
AICD
High quality written communication of concepts and terms in ordinary
English as not all readers of the report can be assumed to be specialists
competent in corporate governance
Case Study
‘As a separate legal person, a corporation has two basic objectives: To survive and to
thrive. Shareholder value is not the objective of the corporation; it is an outcome of
the corporation’s activities. While shareholders entrust their stakes in a corporation
to the board of directors, shareholders are just one audience among others that the
board may consider when making decisions on behalf of the corporation.
These audiences, typically called stakeholders, may also include other financial
stakeholders, such as bondholders, and nonfinancial stakeholders, such as employees,
customers, suppliers, and NGOs representing various concerns of civil society. In the
face of limited resources, no matter how large the corporation, directors must make
choices regarding the significance of the corporation’s many audiences.’
Source: Robert G Eccles and Tim Youmans (2015) ‘Why Boards Must Look Beyond
Shareholders’, MIT Sloan Management Review
http://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/why-boards-must-look-beyond-shareholders/6
Required
Assume you have been employed as a corporate governance consultant by the
Australian Institute of Company Directors (AICD). The AICD is concerned that many
company directors hold the opinion that the company’s board of directors has a
responsibility to place the interests of shareholders above all other stakeholder
interests.
Your assignment is to prepare a report to be submitted to the AICD evaluating the
evidence that the responsibility of a company director is to place shareholder interests
above those of other stakeholders. Specifically, the AICD has requested that your
report contain evidence, examples and recommendations for company directors that
will guide them when making board decisions so they are responsive to diverse
stakeholder audiences. The AICD has advised you that they intend to make your
report a public document and it will be uploaded to the website so it can be read by
both corporate governance specialists and non-specialists.
(Assessment Task 3 details commence on the next page)7
Assessment Task 3
Due Date: 5.00pm Monday 11 September 2017
Length: 2,400 words total (+/- 10%) Reference list and cover sheet details are
not included in this word-limit total.
Weighting: 30% of total unit marks
Assessment Criteria:
Demonstration of knowledge of the issues and evidence of wide
reading to support your analysis
Demonstration of your ability to apply the knowledge to identify keys
issues leading to your recommendations
Evidence of sound reasoning and the exercise of professional
judgement to support your recommendations
Development and statement of concise recommendations for
presentation to the Chairman
Overall structure and professional presentation of your report to the
Chairman
High quality written communication of concepts and terms as the
Chairman can be assumed to be professionally competent in corporate
governance
Case Study
‘Countering cyber risk presents a significant strategic challenge to leaders across
industries and sectors but one that they must surmount in order to take advantage of
the opportunities presented by the vast technological advances in networked
technology that are currently in their early stages. Over the past decade, we have
significantly expanded our understanding of how to build secure and resilient digital
networks and connected devices. However, board-level capabilities for strategic
thinking and governance in this area have failed to keep pace with both the
technological risks and the solutions that new innovations provide.
….
Boards have a vital governance function, determining overall company behaviour and
setting a company’s risk appetite. For boards, action means effectively exercising
oversight by asking managers the right questions to ensure that the boards’ strategic
objectives are met. This function is no different in the area of cyber resilience. By
offering the following principles and tools, the Forum hopes to facilitate useful
dialogue between boards and the managers they entrust with the operation of the
companies to which they owe their fiduciary obligations.’8
Source: World Economic Forum (2017), Advancing Cyber Resilience: Principles and
Tools for Boards,
http://www3.weforum.org/docs/IP/2017/Adv_Cyber_Resilience_PrinciplesTools.pdf
Required
Assume you have been employed as a corporate governance consultant by a company
listed on the Australian Stock Exchange and ranked within the ASX 200. The Chairman
of the company has decided to address the issue of cyber security at the company
board level.
As an initial step in the process of improving the cyber resilience of the company the
Chairman has employed you to prepare a report that critically analyses how the
company can best integrate its cyber security and resilience protocols to ensure
continued corporate survival and improved business performance. The Chairman has
requested that you submit a report providing examples of best practice and a clear set
of recommendations on how the company should initiate a cyber resilience policy at
the corporate board level. Your report will be tabled at the next board meeting for
board members to review and evaluate your recommendations.
(End of assessment details)