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Hello! My name is Tracy and I'm a current high school student. I'm conducting an interview with any professional in Tax Examiners and Collectors, and Revenue Agents field for a Foundations in Health Science Class project about careers! I have created a total of 13 questions. Comment on this post, answering all 13 questions to be a part of my assignment.?

Unfortunately, his is my second time posting this since no one answered my first post. Please help me and answer these questions for my health science assignment:

What profession did you choose? Why?
How many years of college did you need to go through?
What jobs did you work before you landed your present professional job?
How can I decide if I should earn a Ph.D. in this field?
Were you in a college program?
Did you have to pivot and go back to school at a later date?
Did you shadow another professional in the field?
Did you join any school clubs related to your current profession?
Was there a particular subject you struggled with during your school years
What skill sets did you learn or gain while pursuing your career?
Were you faced with any obstacles that slowed you down? How did you overcome them?
What is something about your profession that you want others to keep in mind before pursuing in the same path?
What is the most difficult part about working in your professional job?

Thank you for your time.


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Denise’s Answer

Hi Tracy - here are my answers:
1. What profession did you choose? Why?
I chose to work in tax in public accounting. After taking tax courses and auditing courses - I felt that tax was a better fit for me. I really enjoyed my work when I was an intern and decided to stick to this career field.
2. How many years of college did you need to go through?
I did not go the traditional route. I do have a bachelor's but not in finance or accounting. After I decided to change my career to accounting, I went back to school to get a master's in accountancy. To do this I had to take about 6 prerequisite courses in addition to the graduate courses included in the master's program.
3. What jobs did you work before you landed your present professional job?
I received a job offer after my first internship and began full time while still finishing my master's in accountancy.
4. How can I decide if I should earn a Ph.D. in this field?
I think if you are wanting to be a professor or teach accounting in some capacity then I would say to get a PhD
5. Were you in a college program?
Yes, I was in a graduate program for accountancy.
6. Did you have to pivot and go back to school at a later date?
Yes, only because I decided to change my career to be an accountant.
7. Did you shadow another professional in the field?
I did not shadow anyone but I did have a family member that was also an accountant.
8. Did you join any school clubs related to your current profession?
I was working full time while I was getting my master's so the only club I was in was a finance and accounting club which led me to my first internship.
9. Was there a particular subject you struggled with during your school years
I was not a big fan of audit.
10. What skill sets did you learn or gain while pursuing your career?
I had to learn how to effectively communicate, leadership skills, management skills. You can take classes but really these skills come with practice.
11. Were you faced with any obstacles that slowed you down? How did you overcome them?
Yes, while pursuing my master's I was still working full time. I also got married and had a child. While it took a lot longer to finish my master's it still taught me valuable lessons of discipline and time management.
12. What is something about your profession that you want others to keep in mind before pursuing in the same path?
AI and automation is really revolutionizing our industry and if you can I would try and take some courses that include these two subjects.
13. What is the most difficult part about working in your professional job?
There are always changes and you will always be learning no matter how far along you are in your career. I am a lifelong learner, so this is actually very exciting at the same time.
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Christopher’s Answer

Hello!

What profession did you choose? Why?
- Public Accounting
How many years of college did you need to go through?
- four years at a university
What jobs did you work before you landed your present professional job?
- Representative at Hollywood Video
- Clerk at university library
- Administrative Assistant at a small insurance company
How can I decide if I should earn a Ph.D. in this field?
-Ph.D. in accounting sounds awful.
Were you in a college program?
-No.
Did you have to pivot and go back to school at a later date?
-Yes, once I passed the CPA exam, I needed to take online classes to obtain the required number of education units needed to obtain licensure.
Did you shadow another professional in the field?
-Yes, 12 months of accounting experience is required for CPA licensure
Did you join any school clubs related to your current profession?
-No.
Was there a particular subject you struggled with during your school years
-Art History and Statistics
What skill sets did you learn or gain while pursuing your career?
- Obtained deeper understanding of financial statements and personal finance.
Were you faced with any obstacles that slowed you down? How did you overcome them?
- To pass the CPA exam, you need to score at least 75% on each of the four parts (FAR, REG, AUD, BED). I got a 74% two times in a row on the AUD part. I started over from the beginning with my studies and finally got a 92%.
What is something about your profession that you want others to keep in mind before pursuing in the same path?
- Accounting is not just crunching numbers in Excel all day. You will be spending a vast majority of your time working directly with clients and coworkers.
What is the most difficult part about working in your professional job?
- work/life balance
Thank you for your time.
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Kevin’s Answer

Hi Tracy, I believe I answered your question the first time. Here is my response, copied from the previous:

1. What profession did you choose? Why?

Revenue Agent with the Internal Revenue Service.

2. How many years of college did you need to go through?

I earned a four-year degree in accounting. I also have a master's in accountancy, though that was not required to start my career as a revenue agent.

3. What jobs did you work before you landed your present professional job?

My resume is very long, as I've worked many jobs throughout my life. I've worked as an arena concessions manager, youth sports umpire, wedding photographer, construction worker, barista, bike shop manager, English language teacher in Vietnam, and many other roles. I didn't find my interest in accounting until I was in my thirties, at which point I started by working in the mortgage financial services industry, and then as a staff accountant for a large grocery chain in the Midwest. All in all, my broad experience has helped me to better understand a wide variety of industries, which is very useful for a revenue agent.

4. How can I decide if I should earn a Ph.D. in this field?

Unless you want to be an accounting professor at a university, there is really no need for a Ph.D. in accounting. A CPA license is considered the gold standard for accounting credentials, and is something you can earn without any graduate study whatsoever. To earn your CPA you'll need a bachelor's degree in accounting (or similar fields), 2,000 hours of work experience in public accounting, continuing education hours (masters or professional education), and you'll have to pass four CPA exams.

5. Were you in a college program?

Yes. See above.

6. Did you have to pivot and go back to school at a later date?

Yes. I earned my bachelors' in philosophy and spent years bouncing between jobs. I went back to school when I was in my thirties to earn my accounting degree.

7. Did you shadow another professional in the field?

Not in any formal way, but every accounting role I've held does involve a good deal of mentoring others and being mentored by seniors.

8. Did you join any school clubs related to your current profession?

I did not.

9. Was there a particular subject you struggled with during your school years

Accounting. I know that seems funny to have struggled with something that became my career, but my first few accounting classes were very difficult for me. It was the challenge of learning something complex that drew me in and held my interest.

10. What skill sets did you learn or gain while pursuing your career?

I've had to learn how to conduct tax research and relay my findings clearly in writing. I've also had to develop technical proficiency with various software platforms used in accounting (SAP, Alteryx, Excel, etc).

11. Were you faced with any obstacles that slowed you down? How did you overcome them?

Absolutely. My wife was in the Navy when I earned my bachelors, and I knew that we would have to move across the country halfway through my degree program. Thus, I decided to attend a university that offered an online degree program. I'm also a parent who had very young kids when I was in my accounting program, so I had to manage my time much more carefully than I ever had before. Let's just say there were plenty of nights where I was studying at the kitchen table until 2am.

12. What is something about your profession that you want others to keep in mind before pursuing the same path?

It's not about math; everyone seems to think that you have to love math to be an accountant, but there's actually very little focus on that. In reality, a revenue agent is someone who is primarily interested in learning about how businesses work, isn't afraid to ask questions, and is confident enough to be objective regarding tax scenarios and how they affect taxpayers. The job involves a lot of interviewing taxpayers, as well as documenting those interviews, documenting evidence, documenting research findings, documenting relevant court rulings... there's lots of documentation.

13. What is the most difficult part about working in your professional job?

The documentation can feel tedious at times, and sometimes uncooperative taxpayers can make your life difficult.
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