Finance professionalism in the 21st century : are finance undergraduates today ready to be finance professionals?

Financial frauds and scandals have thrown the finance profession into the spotlight as practitioners in the industry come under pressure from severe public criticisms. In view of the high public expectations placed on the degree of professionalism among finance professionals, this study seeks to pro...

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Main Authors: Lee, Hui Xin., Low, Su Ern., Chia, Eileen Sin Wei.
Other Authors: Chan Kim Yin
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51423
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-514232023-05-19T07:23:08Z Finance professionalism in the 21st century : are finance undergraduates today ready to be finance professionals? Lee, Hui Xin. Low, Su Ern. Chia, Eileen Sin Wei. Chan Kim Yin Nanyang Business School DRNTU::Business Financial frauds and scandals have thrown the finance profession into the spotlight as practitioners in the industry come under pressure from severe public criticisms. In view of the high public expectations placed on the degree of professionalism among finance professionals, this study seeks to provide insights into finance professionalism in today’s context. “Dimensions of Professionalism”, coined by Richard H. Hall in 1968, was utilized as a frame for reference in this study to uncover the understanding of professionalism and to explore the degree of professionalism among finance undergraduates. Correlation analysis was employed to examine the extent to which these undergraduates’ degree of professionalism is related to their views on the financial frauds and scandals and to initiatives by regulatory parties to strengthen professionalism in the finance industry. Data showed that current finance undergraduates may still be far from the ideals of professionalism as practiced by more traditional professions like accounting, medicine or law. Specifically, the data showed that majority of the finance undergraduates considered professional knowledge, instead of attitudes, to be important in a professional. Clearly, more has to be done to raise the degree of professionalism among them. Possible initiatives that educational institutions may take to assist finance undergraduates in their professional development are also examined. Lastly, implications and suggestions for future research are discussed. BUSINESS 2013-04-02T09:06:56Z 2013-04-02T09:06:56Z 2013 2013 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51423 en Nanyang Technological University 96 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Business
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business
Lee, Hui Xin.
Low, Su Ern.
Chia, Eileen Sin Wei.
Finance professionalism in the 21st century : are finance undergraduates today ready to be finance professionals?
description Financial frauds and scandals have thrown the finance profession into the spotlight as practitioners in the industry come under pressure from severe public criticisms. In view of the high public expectations placed on the degree of professionalism among finance professionals, this study seeks to provide insights into finance professionalism in today’s context. “Dimensions of Professionalism”, coined by Richard H. Hall in 1968, was utilized as a frame for reference in this study to uncover the understanding of professionalism and to explore the degree of professionalism among finance undergraduates. Correlation analysis was employed to examine the extent to which these undergraduates’ degree of professionalism is related to their views on the financial frauds and scandals and to initiatives by regulatory parties to strengthen professionalism in the finance industry. Data showed that current finance undergraduates may still be far from the ideals of professionalism as practiced by more traditional professions like accounting, medicine or law. Specifically, the data showed that majority of the finance undergraduates considered professional knowledge, instead of attitudes, to be important in a professional. Clearly, more has to be done to raise the degree of professionalism among them. Possible initiatives that educational institutions may take to assist finance undergraduates in their professional development are also examined. Lastly, implications and suggestions for future research are discussed.
author2 Chan Kim Yin
author_facet Chan Kim Yin
Lee, Hui Xin.
Low, Su Ern.
Chia, Eileen Sin Wei.
format Final Year Project
author Lee, Hui Xin.
Low, Su Ern.
Chia, Eileen Sin Wei.
author_sort Lee, Hui Xin.
title Finance professionalism in the 21st century : are finance undergraduates today ready to be finance professionals?
title_short Finance professionalism in the 21st century : are finance undergraduates today ready to be finance professionals?
title_full Finance professionalism in the 21st century : are finance undergraduates today ready to be finance professionals?
title_fullStr Finance professionalism in the 21st century : are finance undergraduates today ready to be finance professionals?
title_full_unstemmed Finance professionalism in the 21st century : are finance undergraduates today ready to be finance professionals?
title_sort finance professionalism in the 21st century : are finance undergraduates today ready to be finance professionals?
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51423
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