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Professional Judgment in Auditing: Professional Judgment Frameworks as Teaching Tools

Professional Judgment in Auditing: Professional Judgment Frameworks as Teaching Tools. Douglas F. Prawitt Glen Ardis Professor of Accountancy Brigham Young University. John D. Keyser National Director of Assurance Services McGladrey LLP. Jason L. Smith (Moderator)

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Professional Judgment in Auditing: Professional Judgment Frameworks as Teaching Tools

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  1. Professional Judgment in Auditing: Professional Judgment Frameworks as Teaching Tools

  2. Douglas F. Prawitt Glen Ardis Professor of Accountancy Brigham Young University John D. KeyserNational Director of Assurance ServicesMcGladrey LLP Jason L. Smith (Moderator) Associate Professor of Accounting University of Nevada, Las Vegas

  3. Agenda

  4. Why focus on Professional Judgment? • Increased emphasis on judgment in accounting & auditing • Principles-based accounting and auditing standards • Movement toward fair value accounting • Etc. • Increased importance of ability to exercise effective professional judgment, professional skepticism

  5. Professional Judgment:What it looks like, and common threats

  6. The KPMG Professional Judgment Framework

  7. The KPMG Professional Judgment Framework Consultation

  8. Steps in the judgment process

  9. Polling Question 1 (CPE Credit) • Within an auditing context, what is professional judgment? • Professional judgment is the process of using relevant training, knowledge, and experience to reach a decision or draw a conclusion in evaluating evidence, estimating probabilities, or selecting between options. • Professional judgment is professional skepticism, which is an attitude that includes a questioning mind and a critical assessment of audit evidence. • Professional judgment is the application of one’s experience to make a judgment in the absence of supporting evidence, based on the facts and circumstances of the audit engagement. • Professional judgment is the construction of a logical justification to support an outcome or conclusion that is otherwise not supported by the available evidence.

  10. The McGladrey Professional Judgment Framework

  11. McGladrey Professional Judgment Framework

  12. Steps in McGladrey Judgment Process

  13. Step 1 - Frame the Issue Consider other perspectives and the implications of those views: • Regulator, manager, user • Error vs. fraud • Owner, lender, investor, legal, insurer, customer, audit committee • How might a judgment look in the future with the benefit of hindsight, assuming various outcomes? 12

  14. Steps in McGladrey Judgment Process

  15. Step 2 - Determine Objectives Determine Objectives: What is wanted or needed? • Ask how you would justify a judgment or decision • Are you comfortable at a gut level moving ahead with a judgment process? 14

  16. Step 2 - Identify Alternatives • A decision or judgment can only be as good as the best alternative considered • Common Pitfalls: • Consider only typical or first alternative that comes to mind • Do the same thing as prior year • Decision “triggers”—an alternative masquerading as a problem or “issue” to be solved

  17. Steps in McGladrey Judgment Process

  18. Steps in McGladrey Judgment Process

  19. Steps in McGladrey Judgment Process

  20. Fundamental Elements of Professional Judgment Framework • Apply Relevant Knowledge and Learn from Experience • Professional knowledge is brought to bear and reflection on experiences allows for enhanced professional judgment going forward • Professional Skepticism • As depicted the judgment process is performed with a mindset characterized by professional skepticism • Potential Frames • Judgments are informed through explicit consideration of different perspectives or “frames”

  21. Polling Question 2 (CPE Credit) • Which of the following statements about judgment frames is correct? • A situation cannot have more than one appropriate frame. • There is often no single best frame for a given situation. • Frames are not used by risk averse individuals. • Professionals should eliminate the use of frames from their judgment processes.

  22. Judgment Biases

  23. Factors Affecting Judgment

  24. Reality - Descriptive Bounded Rationality • Lack important information • Time and cost constraints • Limited memory capacity • Limitations on intelligence and perceptions

  25. What we do: Systematic shortcuts • System 1 (quick) and Satisfice • Heuristics • We use simplifying judgment strategies. Rules of thumb developed over time because of our bounded rationality. Example crossing the street in New York…

  26. Paradox Our minds routinely solve problems too difficult for the mightiest computers, but we also make errors in the simplest of judgments about everyday events

  27. Judgment Tendencies • Overconfidence: Tendency to be overconfident in our judgment abilities • Availability: Tendency to judge likelihood of events by how readily available specific examples are in our memory • Anchoring: Tendency to insufficiently adjust away from an initial anchor • Confirmation: Tendency to seek and overweight confirming evidence 26

  28. A Pervasive Judgment Tendency… Overconfidence Bias Most of us are overconfident in our judgment abilities and do not acknowledge the actual level of uncertainty that exists.

  29. Overconfident Experts “Heavier-than-air flying machines are impossible” “They couldn’t hit an elephant at this dist…”

  30. What’s So Bad About Overconfidence? • Overconfidence Can Lead To: • Taking on too many projects • Over promising on deadlines • Considering only one alternative • Truncating information search or even skipping evidence gathering • Snap judgments • Avoidance or poor execution of judgment model 29

  31. Confirmation Tendency • We tend to have preferences • We tend to seek confirming evidence • We give confirming evidence greater weight than disconfirming evidence • We often cannot know something to be true without checking to see how it might be false

  32. What is Happening in the Profession with Respect to Enhancement of Professional Judgment?

  33. Goals of McGladrey Professional Judgment Initiative • Shared frame of reference, common vocabulary • Enhance the ability of audit professionals to consistently exercise quality judgment • Enhance on-the-job training/coaching during engagements • Build confidence to exercise professional judgment effectively and efficiently

  34. McGladrey Training

  35. McGladrey – Other Efforts • Consultation forms • Practice aids • Interoffice inspection

  36. CAQ • Working Group • Member firms participate • Professional Judgment Thought Leadership • Description of a judgment process • Discussion of common traps and biases

  37. Polling Question 3 (CPE Credit) • The confirmation bias is a subconscious tendency to do which of the following? • Seek evidence that confirms a biased judgment • Seek evidence that confirms a previously held view • Underutilize confirmations in the testing of accounts receivable • Seek evidence that disconfirms a previously held view

  38. Integrating Professional Judgment into the Classroom: Can Accounting Students Learn Professional Judgment in the Classroom?

  39. Can You Really Teach Good Judgment? • Is it a natural ability or a skill that can be developed? • True or False: Either you have it or you do not… • Good News! • It is a skill that can be learned and developed • It helps to know what “good judgment” looks like and the common threats to good judgment • The sooner you start learning how to make good professional judgments, the better!

  40. Factors in Developing the Ability to Exercise Good Professional Judgment • Do you agree the following factors contribute to the development of good judgment? • Natural ability • Personal experience • Observing others including mentors • Self-studies/books • AND… • Formal training

  41. How does a visual illusion relate to judgment? • Source: http://www.michaelbach.de/ot/sze_shepardTables/index.html

  42. GRAPHIC OF GOLF SWING

  43. The KPMG Professional Judgment Framework Consultation

  44. Practice makes permanent Phil Mickelson Golf Swing

  45. Threats to good judgment • Not following a good process • Judgment “traps” and “biases” • Mental shortcuts • Help simplify a complex situation • Can facilitate more efficient judgments • USUALLY effective

  46. The purpose and benefits of the topic • Mindset, skills, and techniques behind good judgment begin to form at a young age • Training, deliberate practice, and experience can improve judgment • It is important for students to have a solid foundation in good judgment

  47. How does awareness help with this illusion? • Source: http://www.michaelbach.de/ot/mot_mib/index.html

  48. KPMG Professional Judgment Framework Monograph

  49. McGladrey Monograph

  50. Polling Question 4 (CPE Credit) • You just cannot teach professional judgment; either you have it or you do not. • True • False

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