The Harmonization of Professional Teaching and Professional-Competency Training in Financial Management ()
1. Competency Model
1.1. The Definition of Competency
The competency refers to the personalities of stand-out performers in a special post, environment, and cultural atmosphere. It could be objectively measured. These personalities include the following several aspects:
1) Knowledge: the organization and utilization of useful information in an occupation area.
2) Skill, the ability to get things done.
3) Social role: the image which a person wants to show in front of others.
4) Self-concept: the recognition and perception of one’s own identity.
5) Personal characteristics: the physical characteristics and typical behaviors of a person.
6) Motivation/need: the natural and stable thoughts which determine a person’s external behavior.
Competency Model includes, firstly, the portion of “knowledge” and “skill” regarding what one “should know” and “should be” and, secondly, the emotional intelligence portion of “value, self-image, personality, and internal drive”. Knowledge and skills, etc., are obvious, prominent, and easy to be measured, but the factors which determine the chance or the success are hard to measure. Among these factors, motivation is the potential needs or mode of thinking, which acts, guides, and chooses individual behavior. Personality is a tendency that inclines a behavior or response to a certain way; Self-image is how an individual views itself. Value is a series of basic concept and orientation of an individual. Compared with knowledge and skill, these are non-intellectual factors.
1.2. The Origin of Competency
Competency is a unique thinking mode, working method, and operating process in human resource management. It comes from the needs in organization’s strategic development, targets for strengthening competitiveness, and improving actual performance (Yang Zheng, Yin Junming & Song Yaqin, 2012) . The application of competency originated in the early 1950s, when the US State Department found diplomats selected on the basis of intelligence factors to be unsatisfactory. Many of them who seemed to be very outstanding turned out to be very disappointing in practical work. In this case, Dr. MacLellan was invited to help the State Department of USA to design a selecting method which could effectively predict actual performance of candidates. Dr. MacLellan cited a number of studies to criticize the abuse of intelligence tests in the effort to determine the ability of individuals. He further explained that the personality, intelligence, values and other factors, which people subjectively think could decide work performance, did not show the expected effect in reality. Therefore, he stressed getting rid of the theoretical hypothesis proved by unsustainable and subjective judgments so as to return to reality, start from first-hand materials, directly find out those personal conditions and behavior characteristics capable of real impacts on job performance, and make substantial contributions to the improvements of organization efficiency and promotion of personal success. Dr. MacLellan called these individual conditions and behavior characteristics Competency (Liu Hailing, 2007) .
1.3. Common Competency Model
Competency model is the sum of competencies a certain role needs in a special work. It is a combination of competency characteristics aimed at given position requirements. Different levels of definition and their corresponding levels of description are needed in the position in a model of competency. They determine the key ability and proficiency demanded by a specific task (Mao Cuiyun, 2011) . Using the competency model, individuals can independently identify the competency in work demands, work competency advantage, the field to be improved and developments in continue learning and occupation. There are many kinds of theory on the competency model. The most commonly used models are the iceberg model and the onion model.
1.3.1. The Iceberg Mode
The iceberg model of American HAY management consulting company is the most famous model about competency (see Figure 1). The iceberg model divides competency into seven aspects: motives, traits, self-image, values, attitudes and social role, knowledge, and behavior. Starting from motives and proceeding from the inside to the outside, the model finally takes behavior as the form of outmost competency, which comprehensively summarizes the structural characteristics of competency. According to this model, “knowledge and skills”, similar to the visible tip of an iceberg above the surface of water, are the easiest to change. And “motives and characteristics”, comparable to the part hidden under the water, are not easy to touch. They are the most difficult to change or development. Finally, “self-concept” falls between those two.
1.3.2. The Onion Model
The onion model summarizes the seven aspects into three levels. Competency is composed of an outer layer and
an inner layer. The layers from the surface to the inner layer and the layers in between are shown in Figure 2. The outer layer consists of the basic skills and knowledge. The inner layer is the core content, namely the motives potential, which is the internal driving force to promote individuals to take action to achieve a goal. The onion model considers the inner two layers difficult to evaluate and regards the outside layer as the easiest to cultivate and evaluate. It is a summary and integration of iceberg model.
2. The Explanation in GUIDENCE on Competency for CICPAS
For a CPA in the work environment, competency means his or her ability to complete tasks in accordance with the standards set. Competency is based on the professional quality of CPA. And by professional quality, we mean the professional knowledge, skills, occupation values, ethics and attitudes which a CPA should have to acquire competency. Different professional qualities are required of CPAs in different stages of occupation. So CPAs need to be trained to acquire the qualities. And the qualities should be subject to further maintaining and enhancing through a CPA’ lifelong learning.
Professional knowledge is the body of knowledge a CPA should have for accounting, auditing, of the financial, tax, related legal, organizations and enterprises, information technology and other related knowledge.
Professional skills are the abilities to reasonably and effectively use professional knowledge, maintain occupation values, and ethics. They also include attitude in occupation environment. As for intellectual skills, techniques and skills, personal skills, interpersonal and communication skills, organizational and management skills, they, as a matter of course, also count as professional skills.
CPAs are required to have the professional knowledge of accounting, auditing, tax, finance, legal, organizations and enterprises, and information technology.
CPAs need to acquire professional skills in the following five categories: intellectual skills, technology skills, personal skills, interpersonal and communication skills, and management skills.
Professional values, ethics and attitudes, which highlight the moral principles of the CPAs industry, are the unique occupational behaviors and characteristics CPAs needed.
3. The Necessity of Harmonizing Financial Management Professional Teaching and Professional Competency Training
Both knowledge and ability provide technical guarantee for the completion of Financial Management. And personalities provide the basic guarantee for giving full play to the knowledge and ability. As shown in Figure 3, financial management teaching includes classroom teaching, professional practice, and other teaching links. Classroom teaching consists of professional knowledge teaching, experiments teaching, case studies, and a variety of seminars and other forms of teaching. Practice link includes relevant knowledge modules, workflow visiting research internships in the real sectors, the post teaching internship, professional internships, and other forms. To sum up, classroom teaching is the basic link, experiment teaching is the supplement, and professional internship is the testing link. Therefore, the interaction of these three links has important implications for the training of occupational competency of the talents in financial management.
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Figure 3. Releationship of knowledge, skills and professional quality.
3.1. Professional Teaching Is the Main Channel for Occupational Competency Training
The formation and training of vocational abilities which are influenced by professional teaching, professional fulfillment, Professional morality, environment and other factors, depend on the interaction between professional teaching and practice (Pan Feitong, Wei Hua & Yang Huihui, 2004) . Teachers’ teaching not only allows students to gain knowledge and experience, more importantly, it is also of help to the training of students’ occupational competency. Hence, professional teaching is the main channel for occupational competency training, and practice is the essential method.
Theoretically, the formation of disaggregate-behavior model depends on the invigorating effect of external stimulus and an individual’s social observation of others. External stimulus urges an individual to form a certain behavioral mode in response to the environment and through establishing a solid connection between spontaneous acts of some antecedent and particular stimulus feedback. Classroom teaching allows students to acquire knowledge and learn analytical method from teacher’s explanations and demonstrations. In this regard, knowledge and analytical method not only helps students get professional knowledge and skills but also lays foundation for the cultivation of professional ethics. Teachers are disseminators of professional knowledge as well as the shapers of students’ formation of good professional ethics.
3.2. Professional Internship Is the Main Way for Cultivating Students’ Vocational Skills
Vocational skills include intellectual skills, technology skills, personal skills, interpersonal and communication skills, organizational and business management skills. And professional internships can meet the requirements of technology skills, interpersonal skills, and organizational management skills training (He Diankui, 2008) . During internships, students can enter a real working environment, come into contact with the actual business work, face a variety of practical issues, learn to think independently, try to analyze, and solve problems.
3.3. Ethics Education Is an Important Guarantee of Professional Competence Training
Due to the demand on talents and job-hunting pressure, inclusion of the education of professional ethics in professional education is urgently needed (An Shiao, 2009) . Strengthening the cultivation of modern personality and behavioral modes—such as integrity, independence, innovation, dedication, and self-discipline—are important for all students who face the challenge of globe economy. Also, it is important because it functions to guarantee financial talents’ outstanding performance in their future efforts to serve their community and benefit the society (Meng Yan & Li Ling, 2007) .
4. Pathway to the Harmonization of Financial Management Professional Teaching and Professional Competency Training
Financial Management Talents Training Pathway Based on the Professional Competency is shown in Figure 4.
4.1. Establishment of Dynamic Course Modules Based on Demand Orientation
The curriculum of financial management should highlight the characteristics of their own profession. And these characteristics should be distinguished from the characteristics in other professions. Problems such as repetitive setting of content and unclear division of content should be avoided. We should focus on professional basic courses and professional elective courses setting, professional basic courses, because the focus will enable students go by solid basic principle, and understand the latest development of science and research results (Shao Jingjing, Zong Xuehong & Jiang Xuemei, 2012) . Elective professional courses, as a useful supplement to professional required courses, increase the elasticity course module that reflects the need of industry development. And they guarantee the dynamic docking between curriculum and social demand.
4.2. Reform of Teaching Methods
To change the force-feeding method of teaching in which a teacher talks all way in the class and students listen only passively, we should explore and try the heuristic teaching method. Teachers need to inspire students to think deeply, carry out case teaching method, treat the student as center of the class, and simulate actual working conditions, making the student use Interactive exploration to deal with real problems and particular events, carrying out the project learning from an inductive perspective. Professors are required to be able to make full use of modern teaching methods such as computer aided teaching, information technology teaching, to kindle students’ enthusiasm.
4.3. Hiring Practical Experts
Bringing experts to classroom, hiring enterprises and business experts as teachers to teach courses will ensure
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Figure 4. Financial management talents training pathway based on the professional competency.
that the teaching content are close to real practice. At the same time relevant departments should provide opportunities of continuing education to full-time faculties, and encourage faculties to actively participate in all kinds of faculty training organized by Ministry of Education or relevant professional teaching steering committee. Also they need to create conditions and make arrangements for faculties to take part in social practice in relevant enterprises and institutions (Wang Aijun, 2011) . All this would help improve teachers’ work performance.
4.4. Establishing a Multi-Dimensional Students Learning Quality Evaluation
Traditional evaluation of students’ learning quality is based mainly on exams on professional knowledge. But such examinations cannot fully reflect the students’ vocational ability. Therefore, it is necessary to appropriately increase assignments of case analysis reports and professional internship reports, professional ethics tests and evaluation of the practice units. Requirements for paper publications should also increase. This is because these supplements are also important to improvement of students’ learning quality and useful in professional ability evaluation (Zhou Hong, Zhang Wei, Zong Wenlong & Yang Ji, 2007; Xiao Mingzheng, 2009) .