The Journal and Source Documents

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The General Ledger 4 Post to the ledger The 4 th step of the accounting cycle is to post to the ledger. 4 Post to the ledger The General Ledger is a book.
Advertisements

CHAPTER EIGHT The General Ledger McGraw-Hill/Irwin Accounting Fundamentals, 7/e © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved
Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: Use double-entry accounting. Analyze and journalize transactions. Post journal.
The General Journal and the General Ledger
B a c kn e x t h o m e Copyright  2001 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited. All rights reserved. 2&3 Please read and take BRIEF notes on the following Power-
3–1 McQuaig Bille 1 College Accounting 10 th Edition McQuaig Bille Nobles © 2011 Cengage Learning PowerPoint presented by Douglas Cloud Professor Emeritus.
Chapter 6 - Journalizing. Book of original entry. Transactions recorded in chronological order. Purpose of the Journal: 1. Shows the complete effects.
The General Journal and the General Ledger
The Mechanics of Accounting.
Accounting Is Fun! List The Steps In The Accounting Cycle 1.Analyze source documents & record business transactions in a journal 2.Post journal entries.
The Journal and Source Documents
BAT4m Unit 1: Chapter 1 September Quiz on Friday September 12, 2014.
The Journal and Source Documents
The Mechanics of Accounting The Mechanics of Accounting C H A P T E R 3.
The Accounting Cycle.
Unit 5 The General Journal Journalizing the recording process!
Chapter 2: The Recording Process
Chapter 4 General Journal Accounting 100 Skyline College.
Learning Objective 5 Record transactions in the general journal.
0 Glencoe Accounting Unit 2 Chapter 6 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Unit 2 The Basic Accounting Cycle Chapter 3 Business.
3 - 1 Beginning the Accounting Cycle – Journalizing, Posting, and the Trial Balance Chapter 3.
The Recording Process Chapter 2 Accounting Principles, 7th Edition
 A General Ledger identifies each account individually and includes posted transactions and balances. ◦ Posting is the process of transferring original.
The book (or printout) holding all the accounts
Recording Transactions in a General Ledger. Journal – a form for recording transactions in chronological order. Journaling – recording transactions in.
© 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
Introduction to Accounting 120 Chapter 6: The Journal and Source Documents Mr. Binet Moncton High School.
The source document for all cash payments. CHECK.
The Journal and Source Documents CHAPTER 6. A journal is a book in which the accounting entries for all transactions are first recorded, before they are.
Chapter 7 Quiz on next Tuesday Nov 3.  Let’s review how trial balance is made: 1. Journal entry is made in journal. Debit amount and Credit amount must.
Chapter 6.1 CHAPTER 6.1 THE JOURNAL. Chapter 6.1 THE GENERAL JOURNAL A book in which the accounting entries for all transactions are first recorded, before.
Topic 2: Journalizing Transactions
Step 2 : Journalizing. Accounting Cycle For A Merchandising Business 1. Originating data; for example, sales and purchase related invoices, credit and.
Chapter 2 Chapter 6: The Journal and Source Documents Chapter 2 quiz will be on Monday, September 22.
Chapter 2 Balance Sheet Accounts. Terminology An Account is a form where changes in transactions are recorded A T-account helps us learn accounting Left.
WEYGANDT. KIESO. KIMMEL. TRENHOLM. KINNEAR. BARLOW. ATKINS PRINCIPLES OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING CANADIAN EDITION Chapter 2 The Recording Process Prepared.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2003 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Slide Accounting Information System.
© 2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Introduction to Financial Accounting, 9/e © 2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Introduction to Financial Accounting,
Chpt 7 – Posting to the Ledger Recall T- Accounts. These were a _______ _______ where we could post transactions as they occurred. Now that we have learned.
Week 3.  Business document from which information for journal entry is obtained.  Transaction generates source document.  Each transaction must have.
JOURNALIZING TRANSACTIONS CHAPTER 5. DID YOU EVER KEEP A DIARY? Did you (or someone you know) ever keep a diary or journal to record events in your (their)
Chapter 3 THE ACCOUNTING CYCLE: Capturing Economic Events.
Recording Transactions
The General Journal BAF3M. General Journal Records all parts of a transaction in one place The date, the debit, the credit, and an explanation for each.
Posting Separate Amounts from a Journal to a General Ledger POSTING TRANSFERRING INFORMATION FROM A JOURNAL ENTRY TO A LEDGER ACCOUNT POSTING.
Chapter 6 – The Journal and Source Documents
Chapter 5 Pages  If only a _______________ was used you would have to search through all journal pages to find items affecting a single account.
THE RECORDING PROCESS CHAPTER 2. THE ACCOUNT An account is an individual accounting record of increases and decreases in a specific asset, liability,
 A good accounting system must be able to handle transactions in order, even if they are happening at a rapid pace. The chronological journal is a centuries-old.
Chapter 8 Recording Adjusting and Closing Entries TEST = 150 Points.
Accounting Cycle.
 The Balance Column Account  So far, we have only considered the simple 2- sided ledger account (debits & credits)  In this chapter, we introduce a.
Chapter 6 – The Journal and Source Documents l Accounting 1, 7 th Edition1 Chapter 6 The Journal and Source Documents 6.
Chapter 6 Recording Transactions in a General Journal
Accounting I Chapter 9 – Recording Adjusting & Closing Entries for a Service Business.
Adjusting, Closing, and Reversing Entries for a Corporation
Chapter 2: The Recording Process
The Journal and Source Documents
Chapter 3-Recording Transactions
Posting to the Ledger 7.1.
JOURNALIZING ADJUSTING ENTRIES FOR A DEPARTMENTALIZED BUSINESS
Accounting Standard 8 Understand, interpret, and use accounting principles to make financial decisions.
Lesson 26-4 ADJUSTING ENTRIES Lesson 26-4, page 675.
LESSON 8-1 Recording Adjusting Entries
Business Accounting Chapter 7.
The Accounting Cycle The General Journal.
Chapter 6 The Journal and Source Documents
Analyzing Transactions
LESSON 4-5 End-of-Period Work for a Departmentalized Business
Analyzing Transactions
Presentation transcript:

The Journal and Source Documents Unit 3 : Chapter 6 The Journal and Source Documents Chapter 6 Quiz will be on October 24 (Friday)

The General Journal Just as people write diaries to record their experiences, thoughts, feelings, facts and details, accountants also use diary called, “General Journal” to record facts and details of a business transactions. Accountants write down on General Journal all the things that they should remember for a long time. So far, we used T accounts whenever we recorded transactions.

The General Journal It is easy to use T accounts when the transactions are simple such as one debit entry and one credit entry. In reality, many transactions consist of many accounts, so we have to record the transactions first in the General Journal. (or Journal or Journal Entry) General Journal is a notebook in which accounting entries are first recorded

The General Journal Each transaction is recorded separately in chronological order. Usually there is a blank line between two transactions. GJ is also referred to as the book of original entry Each transaction is recorded separately in the order that they occur It provides a continuous record of all transactions

The First 6 Steps in the Accounting Cycle 1 Transactions occur. 2 Transactions are recorded in the journal in order by date. 3 The accounting entries are transferred to the ledger accounts. (or T accounts) 4 Trial Balance 5 Adjusting Entry 6 Balance Sheet and Income Statement

The Two-Column Journal Year recorded at the top of column. Month recorded once with days noting business transactions. Account titles are always capitalized. Explanations are brief but tell ‘the story’. Debits are always recorded first. Credit particulars are always indented. The completed journal entry must balance. Leave a blank line before next entry. P.R.: Posting Reference – this will be covered in more detail later; just leave it blank for now Year entered once in small figures on the first line of each page. (for this demonstration, I gave it a full line just to make it visible) Month is entered on the first line of each page, but do not repeat for each entry. Enter a new month at the point it occurs. Day is entered on the first line of each journal entry and is repeated no matter how many transactions occur on a given day. Note the compound entry in the second example

The Steps in Recording a Journal Entry Step 1: Date: Enter the day in the date column (second column) Step 2: Debit Accounts: Enter the name of the accounts, which is to be debited. Enter the amount in debit column. Step 3: Credit Accounts: Enter the names of the accounts which is to be credited. They are indented about 1.5 cm. Enter the amount in credit column. Step 4: Explanation: Write a brief explanation for the entry beginning at the left side of the “Particular” column on the line beneath the last credit item.

Example of a Journal Entry Let’s say that on Feb 1, you sold your accounting service to your existing client for $180. Customer did not pay on the same date, but she paid on Feb 15 instead. What are the journal entries? Date Particulars PR Debit Credit Feb 1 AR 180 Service fee(Rev) 180 Sold tax return service to Mr. Smith 15 Bank 180 AR 180 Received money from Mr. Smith Invoice 123

Notes about recording a Journal Entry Year recorded at the top of column. Month recorded only once with days noting business transactions. Account titles are always capitalized. Explanations are brief but tell ‘the story’. (What happened?) Debit accounts are always recorded first. Credit accounts are always indented.

Notes about recording a Journal Entry 7. The completed journal entry must balance. (=> total debit amounts = total credit amounts) 8. Leave a blank line before next entry.

Class Activity Other groups can make a skit, rap song, poem or a sample journal by using chart paper, demonstrating that you can make a journal entry! You can even teach the class with your activity. Create : Group Name Who plays which role?