如果你是江西省考生,教你几招,轻松让你在ACCA考试中保持专注!

发布时间:2020-01-10


不管是职场,生活,你都不可能在一长段时间内只专注一件事。而在面对ACCA考试有那么多门考试科目,怎样才能不手忙脚乱呢?因此,51题库考试学习网在这里教大家如何在考场中能够高度专注的考试,不会被其他琐事影响,从而影响考试成绩的小技巧。

首先,我们要消除一个思维误区。

人是不能进行真正的“多线程工作”的。你的大脑不可能像电脑那样,开着好几个后台,例如:一边放着音乐,一边让你聊微信,一边下载电影

你必须在某个时间段只专注一件事。

回想一下,你复习高数的时候,想着A考,看似是一心二用,但实际上你是复习了一会儿高数,然后想了一会儿A考,你努力把神思拉回来,又复习了一会儿高数,然后思维又切换到A考……

实际上你的大脑在某个时间点只集中在一件事情上,但因为它的重点在不停切换,造成了你大脑一片混沌,手忙脚乱的错觉。

有一个小实验是这样的:

所以复习效率低,也是因为你的思维在不停切换,浪费了大量不必要的时间。并且忙了大半天也没有任何一科有明显进展,这时沮丧挫败灰心自责一系列负面情绪都扑过来了,会让学习陷入恶性循环。

那到底要如何从容面对考试呢?

多线程任务,不是同时做多件事,而是将一个时间段划分好几份,来分配给不同任务。所以多线程学习的核心其实是任务管理。

我们只需要确定哪个时间段要做哪个任务,然后保证一段时间只做一件事。

比如上午集中复习高数,下午集中复习思修,晚上集中复习A考,甚至,也可以先集中复习期末,再专心复习A考。

这里51题库考试学习网提供几个方法:

1. 对时间进行规划。

比如3天以后要考思修,那么你就需要规划这3天,你每天要花多少时间来复(yu)习(xi)思修。你将每一科的计划按紧急程度列出来,写下每天每一科需要进行到什么进度。

这时你就有了每天的小目标。

2. 每天总结自己的进度条更新到哪里了。

建议还是要每天列出to do list,将目标尽量细化,然后在完成每个小任务之后打个勾。

这个习惯看上去非常鸡肋没用,其实超级有必要。这就像你在电脑上完成了一项工作,然后点击了保存。这样的仪式感会提醒我们,让我们的大脑更清楚:这件事已经做完了,可以松一口气不用再想它了。

3. 不一定要先做最紧急的事,先做最重要的事。

甚至,如果你的大脑坚持要每五分钟就从高数切换到思修,那建议你先背一会儿思修,将进度条拉长一点,消除你的焦虑以后再去安心刷高数。

4. 接受自己的不完美。

考A的同学一般都比较有上进心,对自己要求比较高。

一方面这是好事,能让你不断督促自己努力,进步;一方面这样的性格也容易让你苛责自己,产生自责感。所以经常会有同学,一遇到没有头绪的时候就开始心态崩坏,结局通常是越做越糟。

这里学姐要说的就是,偶尔发挥失常,进入状态困难是每个人都会出现的状况。如果遇到这种情况,不要轻易否定自己的能力。首先我们要相信自己可以应对,这样我们才能真正做到有条理,少出错。

如何保持长时间的专注?

除了手忙脚乱之外,很多同学还有一个问题,就是备考的时候忍不住玩手机。看书五分钟,聊八卦两小时,这种现象实在非常普遍。

很多狠人会采取最简单粗暴的方法:不带手机去图书馆。

但是如果我要查单词,信息检索,甚至要联络别人怎么办?况且以后大家工作要提高效率,也不可能使用关掉手机拒绝诱惑这种方法。

所以我们要如何在干扰的情况下,做到长时间的专注呢?

(1)先从能够快速集中注意力的事情做起。

备考时,每天在备考前抄一遍字帖。

一方面,这样难度不高又不那么吸引注意力的工作会让我的心静下来

ACCAer们也可以想想有什么类似的事情是可以让自己平静专注下来,又不容易沉迷的。在每天复习前先做一遍这件事,有一个良好的开端。

(2)尽量让手参与进来。

如果实在很难集中注意力,就采取抄书的方式。因为光看书,你很容易就跳过内容,尤其是那些很难的重点。而手写的速度慢,并且需要输出,所以你的大脑一定会对信息进行处理的。

但这个方法只在你发现心思非常浮躁的时候有效,大多数时候,你还是需要一边理解一边输出。

这时候就不要只是把内容照抄下来而已了。你需要做的,就是将书本上的重点语句换一种表达方式写下来。这时候你的大脑才会去主动思考。

此外,画思维导图也是很好的方法,寻找每个知识点之间的联系,并对下一节知识内容进行预期。

最后,提醒大家要适当地拒绝舒适。

 


下面小编为大家准备了 ACCA考试 的相关考题,供大家学习参考。

6 (a) Explain the term ‘money laundering’. (3 marks)

正确答案:
6 MONEY LAUNDERING
Tutorial note: The answer which follows is indicative of the range of points which might be made. Other relevant material will
be given suitable credit.
(a) Meaning of the term
■ Money laundering is the process by which criminals attempt to conceal the true origin and ownership of the proceeds
of their criminal activity (‘dirty’ money) allowing them to maintain control over the proceeds and, ultimately, providing a
legitimate cover for their sources of income.
■ The term is widely defined to include:
– possessing; or
– in any way dealing with; or
– concealing
the proceeds of any crime (‘criminal property’).
■ It also includes:
– an attempt or conspiracy or incitement to commit such an offence; or
– aiding, abetting, counselling or procuring the commission of such an offence.
■ Further, it includes failure by an individual in a regulated sector to inform. the financial intelligence unit (FIU), as soon
as practicable, of knowledge or suspicion that another person is engaged in money laundering.
Tutorial note: The FIU serves as a national centre for receiving (and, as permitted, requesting), analysing and
disseminating suspicious transaction reports (STRs).

(c) Mr Cobar, the chief executive of SHC, has decided to draft two alternative statements to explain both possible

outcomes of the secrecy/licensing decision to shareholders. Once the board has decided which one to pursue,

the relevant draft will be included in a voluntary section of the next corporate annual report.

Required:

(i) Draft a statement in the event that the board chooses the secrecy option. It should make a convincing

business case and put forward ethical arguments for the secrecy option. The ethical arguments should

be made from the stockholder (or pristine capitalist) perspective. (8 marks)

(ii) Draft a statement in the event that the board chooses the licensing option. It should make a convincing

business case and put forward ethical arguments for the licensing option. The ethical arguments should

be made from the wider stakeholder perspective. (8 marks)

(iii) Professional marks for the persuasiveness and logical flow of arguments: two marks per statement.

(4 marks)

正确答案:

(c) (i) For the secrecy option
Important developments at SHC
This is an exciting time for the management and shareholders of Swan Hill Company. The research and development
staff at SHC have made a groundbreaking discovery (called the ‘sink method’) that will enable your company to produce
its major product at lower cost, in higher volumes and at a much higher quality than our competitors will be able to
using, as they do, the existing production technology. The sink process also produces at a lower rate of environmental
emissions which, as I’m sure shareholders will agree, is a very welcome development.
When considering the options following the discovery, your board decided that we should press ahead with the
investment needed to transform. the production facilities without offering the use of the technology to competitors under
a licensing arrangement. This means that once the new sink production comes on stream, SHC shareholders can, your
board believes, look forward to a significant strengthening of our competitive position.
The business case for this option is overwhelming. By pushing ahead with the investment needed to implement the sink
method, the possibility exists to gain a substantial competitive advantage over all of SHC’s competitors. It will place SHC
in a near monopolist position in the short term and in a dominant position long term. This will, in turn, give the company
pricing power in the industry and the likelihood of superior profits for many years to come. We would expect SHC to
experience substantial ‘overnight’ growth and the returns from this will reward shareholders’ loyalty and significantly
increase the value of the company. Existing shareholders can reasonably expect a significant increase in the value of
their holdings over the very short term and also over the longer term.
Ethical implications of the secrecy option
In addition to the overwhelming business case, however, there is a strong ethical case for the secrecy option. SHC
recognises that it is the moral purpose of SHC to make profits in order to reward those who have risked their own money
to support it over many years. Whilst some companies pursue costly programmes intended to serve multiple stakeholder
interests, SHC recognises that it is required to comply with the demands of its legal owners, its shareholders, and not
to dilute those demands with other concerns that will reduce shareholder returns. This is an important part of the agency
relationship: the SHC board will always serve the best economic interests of its shareholders: its legal owners. The SHC
board believes that any action taken that renders shareholder returns suboptimal is a threat to shareholder value and an
abuse of the agency position. Your board will always seek to maximise shareholder wealth; hence our decision to pursue
the secrecy option in this case. The secrecy option offers the possibility of optimal shareholder value and because
shareholders invest in SHC to maximise returns, that is the only ethical action for the board to pursue. Happily, this
option will also protect the employees’ welfare in SHC’s hometown of Swan Hill and demonstrate its commitment to the
locality. This, in turn, will help to manage two of the key value-adding resources in the company, its employees and its
reputation. This will help in local recruitment and staff retention in future years.
(ii) For the licensing option
Important developments at SHC
Your board was recently faced with a very difficult business and ethical decision. After the discovery by SHC scientists
of the groundbreaking sink production method, we had a choice of keeping the new production technology secret or
sharing the breakthrough under a licensing arrangement with our competitors. After a lengthy discussion, your board
decided that we should pursue the licensing option and I would like to explain our reasons for this on both business and
ethical grounds.
In terms of the business case for licensing, I would like shareholders to understand that although the secrecy option may
have offered SHC the possibility of an unassailable competitive advantage, in reality, it would have incurred a number
of risks. Because of the speed with which we would have needed to have acted, it would have necessitated a large
increase in our borrowing, bringing about a substantial change in our financial structure. This would, in turn, increase
liquidity pressures and make us more vulnerable to rising interest rates. A second risk with the secrecy option would
involve the security of the sink technology ‘secret’. If the sink process was leaked or discovered by competitors and
subsequently copied, our lack of a legally binding patent would mean we would have no legal way to stop them
proceeding with their own version of the sink process.
As well as avoiding the risks, however, the licensing option offers a number of specific business advantages. The royalties
from the licences granted to competitors are expected to be very large indeed. These will be used over the coming years
to extend our existing competitive advantage in the future. Finally, the ‘improvement sharing’ clause in the licensing
contract will ensure that the sink process will be improved and perfected with several manufacturers using the
technology at the same time. SHC’s sink production may, in consequence, improve at a faster rate than would have
been the case were we to have pursued the secrecy option.
Ethical implications of the licensing option
In addition to the business case, there is also a powerful ethical case for the decision we have taken. As a good,
responsible corporate citizen, Swan Hill Company acknowledges its many stakeholders and recognises the impacts that
a business decision has on others. Your board recognises that in addition to external stakeholders having influence over
our operations, our decisions can also affect others. In this case, we have carefully considered the likelihood that keeping
the new technology a secret from our competitors would radically reshape the industry. The superior environmental
performance of the sink process over existing methods will also mean that when fully adopted, the environmental
emissions of the entire industry will be reduced. SHC is very proud of this contribution to this reduction in overall
environmental impact.
There seems little doubt that the secrecy option would have had far-reaching and unfortunate effects upon our industry
and our competitors. The licensing option will allow competitors, and their employees and shareholders, to survive. It
is a compassionate act on our part and shows mercy to the other competitors in the industry. It recognises the number
of impacts that a business decision has and would be the fairest (and most just) option given the number of people
affected.


(b) Explain how the adoption of residual income (RI) using the annuity method of depreciation might prove to

be a superior basis for the management incentive plan operated by NCL plc.

(N.B. No illustrative calculations should be incorporated into your explanation). (4 marks)

正确答案:
(b) The use of residual income as a basis for the management incentive plan operated by NCL plc would have the following
advantages:
Divisional management would be more willing to accept a project with a positive residual income and this would contribute
to the improved performance of NCL plc. Also, the disincentive to accept a project with a positive residual income but a return
on investment regarded by divisional management as not being in their best interests would be removed, because divisional
management would be rewarded.
The use of annuity depreciation may improve performance appraisal by removing the effect of straight-line depreciation which
tends to distort project returns especially in the early years of a project’s life when invested capital remains relatively high due
to the constant depreciation charge. The residual income approach using annuity depreciation will only match the NPV if the
annual cashflows of a project are constant. Hence the method when applied to the North or South projects would produce
an NPV which does not exactly match that previously calculated. By way of contrast it is forecast that the East project will
have constant cashflows and in this instance the NPV and residual income based approach when discounted, will produce
the same result.

5 (a) Carver Ltd was incorporated and began trading in August 2002. It is a close company with no associated

companies. It has always prepared accounts to 31 December and will continue to do so in the future.

It has been decided that Carver Ltd will sell its business as a going concern to Blade Ltd, an unconnected

company, on 31 July 2007. Its premises and goodwill will be sold for £2,135,000 and £290,000 respectively

and its machinery and equipment for £187,000. The premises, which do not constitute an industrial building,

were acquired on 1 August 2002 for £1,808,000 and the goodwill has been generated internally by the

company. The machinery and equipment cost £294,000; no one item will be sold for more than its original cost.

The tax adjusted trading profit of Carver Ltd in 2007, before taking account of both capital allowances and the

sale of the business assets, is expected to be £81,000. The balance on the plant and machinery pool for the

purposes of capital allowances as at 31 December 2006 was £231,500. Machinery costing £38,000 was

purchased on 1 March 2007. Carver Ltd is classified as a small company for the purposes of capital allowances.

On 1 August 2007, the proceeds from the sale of the business will be invested in either an office building or a

portfolio of UK quoted company shares, as follows:

Office building

The office building would be acquired for £3,100,000; the vendor is not registered for value added tax (VAT).

Carver Ltd would borrow the additional funds required from a UK bank. The building is let to a number of

commercial tenants who are not connected with Carver Ltd and will pay rent, in total, of £54,000 per calendar

quarter, in advance, commencing on 1 August 2007. The company’s expenditure for the period from 1 August

2007 to 31 December 2007 is expected to be:

Loan interest payable to UK bank 16,000

Building maintenance costs 7,500

Share portfolio

Shares would be purchased for the amount of the proceeds from the sale of the business with no need for further

loan finance. It is estimated that the share portfolio would generate dividends of £36,000 and capital gains, after

indexation allowance, of £10,000 in the period from 1 August 2007 to 31 December 2007.

All figures are stated exclusive of value added tax (VAT).

Required:

(i) Taking account of the proposed sale of the business on 31 July 2007, state with reasons the date(s) on

which Carver Ltd must submit its corporation tax return(s) for the year ending 31 December 2007.

(2 marks)

正确答案:
(a) (i) Due date for submission of corporation tax return
Carver Ltd intends to cease trading on 31 July 2007. This will bring to an end the accounting period that began on
1 January 2007. A new accounting period will commence on 1 August 2007 and end on the company’s accounting
reference date on 31 December 2007.
Carver Ltd is required to submit its corporation tax return by the later of:
– one year after the end of its accounting period; and
– one year after the end of the period of account in which the last day of the accounting period falls.
Accordingly, the company must submit its corporation tax returns for both accounting periods by 31 December 2008.

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