denisdman wrote:
Questions for you. CPA is not a degree. Do you mean she is sitting for the exams?
In her graduate work, is it just a regular MBA program or does she have an accounting concentration. A general MBA is a tough leap to the CPA exams, and you might not even have the required course survey to sit for the exams. Now, if she is an accounting undergrad, then she should be fine.
I had to take extra classes to get the required courses to sit for the exams. I did not have tax or audit because my grad degree is in finance.
Well, as always, it's complicated.
She went to a small, private school for a year to become an elementary school teacher, kind of knowing that wasn't what she wanted to do. It's what her Mom does.
Then she transferred to GVSU. Undergrad with major in accounting, almost none of her first year credits transferred (out-of-state church school), so she took summer classes and full schedules plus until the more intense accounting classes started. She has finished her undergrad degree in Accounting and simultaneously started grad-level classes. The program is to obtain a Master's degree in Accounting (MSA?) AND take the CPA exam. I'm not sure if the college has classes directly aimed at passing the CPA exams or even administers them, I haven't asked those questions. She wasn't really interested in being a private accountant and didn't think the CPA was really needed, but has changed her opinion now, after her first internship.
I called it an MBA because I figured most people know what that is, like me. I'm not sure why the degree would be a Masters of Science in Accounting, as compared to a Master's of Business in Accounting, but, whatever.
She got the first non-4.0 grade of her life in one of her last undergrad classes, where she was graded on a huge group project with a group of slackers. Yep, from Kindergarten to fifth year of college straight A's only. I told her I didn't give a crap and neither would potential employers. The company she interned with already offered her a full-time spot after graduation. I think it is for one rate, or more if she passes the exams. Yes, it is six figures, and I think the CPA rate is more than I make. Shoot, she made over $25K as an intern for last Winter semester during tax season.
Her grad degree will make me the least-educated member of my family; three Masters and a Doctor (NOT-So-humble brag, f you very much).((but, this IS a denisdman reply))
The firm she works with has some fascinating clients. She cannot tell us who, of course, but there are several billionaires, one with like 75 LLCs to file returns for each year. And she, apparently, picked up on it really fast, and really fit into the company culture, until Covid.