AI Summary
[DOCUMENT_TYPE: study_guide]
**What This Document Is**
This is a practice problem set designed to reinforce your understanding of job order costing principles, a core component of cost accounting within the broader field of Accounting Principles II. Specifically, it focuses on the mechanics of recording costs within a manufacturing environment utilizing a job order cost system. The problems presented build upon foundational concepts related to cost accumulation, allocation, and the flow of costs through the production process. It’s geared towards students learning to apply accounting standards to real-world manufacturing scenarios.
**Why This Document Matters**
Students enrolled in ACC 2020 at Wright State University – and anyone learning cost accounting – will find this resource valuable. It’s best used *after* you’ve grasped the theoretical underpinnings of job order costing from your lectures and textbook. Working through these problems will help solidify your ability to correctly journalize transactions related to materials, labor, and overhead. It’s an excellent way to prepare for quizzes and exams, and to build confidence in your ability to apply these concepts in a professional setting. This is particularly helpful for students who learn best by doing.
**Common Limitations or Challenges**
This document focuses exclusively on the application of job order costing. It does *not* cover alternative costing methods (like process costing), detailed explanations of underlying accounting principles, or comprehensive coverage of cost-volume-profit analysis. It assumes you already have a basic understanding of general journal entries and the accounting equation. It also doesn’t provide step-by-step solutions; it’s designed to be a self-testing tool where you actively work through the problems.
**What This Document Provides**
* A series of practice problems centered around a job order cost system.
* Scenarios involving the recording of direct materials, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead.
* Exercises requiring the preparation of journal entries to reflect cost flows.
* Problems involving the application of factory overhead to individual jobs.
* Illustrative examples of cost accumulation for both completed and unfinished jobs.
* Practice with calculating and applying predetermined overhead rates.