~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Motivation Quote~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~Sometimes it takes a lot of rain before you get your rainbow!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Just FOcus On The Key Topics That You Know And Ignore What You Don't!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The glory is not in never failing but in rising again everytime you fall!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~YOU MAKE THE FAILURE COMPLETE WHEN YOU STOP TRYING!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Tuesday, April 26, 2005

exam centre is being allocated

please login to the my acca website to check which centre you are being allocated
login here
you can confirm which centre you are being allocated lo.
but sad to say their decision is normally final and you cannot change anything.

collect your acca part two certificate

those who had cleared your acca part two you can college your acca part two certificate from today on wards.
from sumathy at sbs office

Sunday, April 24, 2005

audit sharing session

the audit sharing session will be changed to from saturday 23 april to monday 25 april please take note on this matter.
the venue would be R 001 (the conference room below the sbs office)
and the time would be at 11.00 am
please help pass the message around.

guides from a 3.7 lecture

LCA lecturer Steve Lumby gives you the inside track

The pass rate on this paper is very poor – particularly if you keep in mind that it is one of the final core papers. At this stage of professional exams you might expect two-third of candidates to pass. The reality is almost the opposite.

What can you do to put yourself in a better position for passing? Plenty – and the starting point is to understand why people fail. If you can understand why other candidates in the past have failed, you stand a chance of learning from their mistakes – and not go on to repeat them yourself.

In order to gain an insight into why candidates fail this exam, go and have a look at the examiner’s own feedback on past exam papers. The ‘Examiner’s Comments’ is a valuable resource published on the ACCA’s website, along with past exam questions and answers. (It can be also found in the Student Accountant -- the October edition for the previous June’s exam and the April edition for the previous December’s exam).

Unfortunately, although the ACCA leave a good historical record of past exam papers and answers on their website – going back five years or more – the examiner’s comments on each paper only have a six-month shelf life before they are deleted. (A rather thoughtless action by someone who has responsibility for the site). This means that if you want to have a look at the examiner’s comments for anything further back that the June 2004 exam, you’re going to have to do some asking around of lecturers, fellow students and libraries.

So what does the examiner say about why people fail? Here is a selection of his comments. They are in no particular order. However, each one has been repeated on numerous occasions, which suggests that an awful lot of candidates aren’t taking note of what the examiner says.

Common reasons for failure include:

• Very brief answers to discursive questions

• Not attempting all parts of a question

• Failure to read the question carefully

• Not answering the question asked

• General answers given in response to a specific question

• Irrelevant answers

• Poor time management

• Superficial knowledge

• Lack of attention paid to previous exam questions

• Undertaking unnecessary and inappropriate calculations

• Candidates tried to “question spot” and so are unprepared for a topic that had arisen in a recent past exam

• Lack of basic knowledge

• Failure to make use of information given in the question.

We could go on, but hopefully, you’ve got the picture by now. Things are pretty bad. The examiner’s standard opening comment tends to be: “The overall performance on this paper was rather disappointing.”Paper 3.7 may well be a really tough exam, with questions that sometimes can be rather unfair and other questions that are unnecessarily lengthy, or that require large amounts of repetitive calculations.

However, there is no escaping the fact that the average candidate doesn’t seem to be doing much to help themselves.So what really are the keys to being successful in this paper? I would suggest the following:

Firstly, concentrate on the basics. Nobody fails this exam because they don’t know the difficult parts of the syllabus. They fail because they don’t have a good enough grasp of the basics. What do I mean by the basics?

Let me give you some examples:

• Handling inflation correctly in an NPV analysis

• Finding the cost of debt of fixed interest redeemable debentures

• Being comfortable with annuity discounting

• Being able to correctly write down and use the 20 key formulas in the syllabus

• Being able to work through the four basic FX hedge techniques

• Knowing how to use the four basic techniques to value a company

• Being able to demonstrate an interest rate coupon swap

• Forecasting FX rates using PPPT

• Being able to thoughtfully calculate some simple ratios and make intelligent comments on the signals that they give.

Secondly, work smart. Recognise that not all areas of the syllabus are equally important. Focus on what the examiner calls the core topic areas – and only start to look at non-core topics once you feel that you have a good grasp of the core topics.

What are these core topic areas? I would suggest:

investment appraisal (NPV / FDI / APV); financing decision; FX and interest rate risk management; mergers and acquisitions; and financial forecasting and performance evaluation.

Thirdly, time management in the exam is vital.

• Section A: 40-mark questions: you have 65 minutes to pick up a minimum of 20 marks.

• 30-mark questions: you have 55 minutes to pick up a minimum of 15 marks.

• 35-mark questions: you’ve got 60 minutes.

Within these section A questions – with the theory / essay / discursive questions: allocate one minute for each mark available. Use the balance of the available time to attempt the numerical questions.

Section B: with each question you have 25 minutes to say and do everything that you can. This time allocation strategy leaves a spare 10 minutes at the end of the exam.

Fourthly ,look carefully at past examination questions. Look at what the examiner is asking of candidates; see what areas of knowledge he is particularly interested in testing. Look at how the questions are constructed.

Lastly, do not go through the answers to past exam questions with a fine tooth-comb and find yourself getting lost in the detail. Just make sure you understand the basic analysis used in the numerical questions and the main points being made in answer to the discursive questions. Remember, you don’t have to get 100% to pass the exam.

Good luck!

Saturday, April 23, 2005

Msn virus

if you are using msn please be aware of this
there is a virus in MSN where they send an auto message from you friends who are infected which contain a link to you,
please do not accept or click on it.
cos if not you would be in big big trouble!!!!
and the virus would everyone who using msn in your contact list if you open the link
and now the virus had advance that it ask you to look at it.
it would be a message like
lol look at this....
and it will follow by a very very strange link where it contains your e-mail address.
please please please do not open it.
this will infect your computer and all your friends on msn.
i think it is a spyware.
and antivirus have no effect on this thing.
please be aware for those who are using msn la!

Tuesday, April 19, 2005

Date of release of April 2005 Examination Results

please take note of the following matters:-

Date exam results released 17 May 2005

Deadline for Resit Application 21 May 2005

Collection of Resit Bill 24 May 2005

Deadline for Payment 28 May 2005

Friday, April 15, 2005

solution to those have problem with the exam entry

if you really really did not see your exam entry being confirmed
please go and check whether your account the money is it being credited?
if the money is being credited according to the money you remitted to uk
then you go to the exam entry option page,
and do online entry
https://www.acca-business.org/
this website
when you enter into the first page, just click the enter for your june 2005 exam on the top right,
then you will see the first page where nothing is being selected(i.e. no red tick beside the option you selected)
then you continue the process following the instruction selecting the option you want la.
then when it finished already it will ask you whether you wan print your exam entry acknowledgement letter la
tried for a friend. it works.
but however if your account is not credited with money, you better confirm with office tomorrow.
you all try and see and please give me your feed back?

Friday, April 08, 2005

please check whether you have received acca e-mail for the exam entry acknowledgement

i've receive my acca exam entry acknowledgement via e-mail,
have you?

please check to confirm that acca had acknowledge your exam entry.

if you did not received such e-mail
please check your status at exam entry option where you login to myAccA

Monday, April 04, 2005

exam slip

the exam slip will be out on 5 april
you can collect it from sumahty

April exam time table


date/dayvenuesubject
MONDAY 11/4/2005 AM R(AFA2)- 37 Q10( 41- 77)ABMF4065 FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT & CONTROL
THURSDAY 14/4/2005 AM R(AFA2)- 10
R6( 73- 82)
ABFA4115 FINANCIAL REPORTING
SATURDAY 16/4/2005 AMAFA2- 286
Q7( 1- 120)
Q8( 1- 120)
Q9( 1- 46)
ABFA5075 ADVANCED CORPORATE REPORTING
MONDAY 18/4/2005 AMAFA2- 286
R2( 1- 82)
R3( 1- 82)
R4( 1- 82)
R6( 1- 40)
ABDM5145 STRATEGIC BUSINESS PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT
TUESDAY 19/4/2005 AMR(AFA2)- 5
Q12( 83- 87)
ABFT4065 BUSINESS TAXATION
WEDNESDAY 20/4/2005 AMAFA2- 286
Q8( 1- 120)
Q9( 1- 120)
Q10( 1- 46)
ABMF5185 STRATEGIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
FRIDAY 22/4/2005 AMR(AFA2)- 8
Q10( 41- 48)
ABFA4125 AUDIT & INTERNAL REVIEW


you can also login to tarc website to check the detailed time table
exam time table

Saturday, April 02, 2005

ACCA Horizon

you can review the acca proposed new syllabus in 2007 at the following address
ACCA Horizon