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CIT201: Computerized This course starts with an introduction to basic accounting terms and concepts and walks <br />Accounting I you through the QuickBooks set-up process. Use the leading small business accounting <br />package to organize records, prepare financial reports, handle payroll, and automatically <br />figure federal and state taxes, as well as withholding and employer contributions. <br />Throughout, attention is devoted to creating easy -to -read statements, including profit and <br />loss, balance sheets, accounts receivable, accounts payable, budget, payroll, and project <br />reports, as well as graphs that give students a quick snapshot of overall business. Topics <br />include: <br />• Principles of Accounting <br />• Account Types, Asset, Liability, Owner's Equity <br />• Accounting Records <br />• Invoices and Purchase Orders <br />• Bills and Estimates <br />• Financial Statements <br />• Cash Flow Statements <br />Prerequisite: None <br />CIT203: Database Students will learn the basic skills necessary to begin creating and working with databases. <br />Applications I This structured course will enable students to create tables, queries, forms, reports and <br />databases. A database is a tool for collecting and organizing information. For example, as <br />a database, a phone book organizes a large amount of data —names, addresses, and <br />phone numbers —so you can access it by name in alphabetic order. Even a grocery list is a <br />simple type of database. A computerized database management system (DBMS), such as <br />Microsoft Office Access, enables you to easily collect large volumes of data organized into <br />categories of related information. This type of database allows you to store, organize, and <br />manage your data, no matter how complex it is, and then retrieve and present it in <br />various formats and reports. Organizing data by using a DBMS gives you the power to <br />manipulate, view and report the data in ways that other applications like spreadsheets <br />and word processing documents cannot. For example, a spreadsheet application like <br />Microsoft Excel has its own unique purpose to store, analyze and report data using tools <br />unique to it; however, Access is the better choice to perform various management <br />functions on data such as asking it complex questions and creating structures to input and <br />report it using standardized business structures which you'll learn throughout this course. <br />Topics include: <br />• Explain database concepts and terminology <br />• Create and design data tables <br />• Demonstrate how to modify data tables <br />• Create calculated fields <br />• Describe how to view data from more than one field <br />Prerequisite: None <br />Revision Date on December 12, <br />