Horngren'S Accounting 12 Edition Professional Practice Through
Horngren also served as the president (1976–77) and director of research (1964–66) of the American Accounting Association (AAA) and served on several AAA committees.Horngren has published more than 50 articles, including several in The Accounting Review, and he has served on the editorial board of the Journal of Accounting Research. Littlefield Professor of Accounting.Horngren’s impact is evidenced by his involvement in professional organizations, such as the Accounting Principles Board (1968–73), the Financial Accounting Standards Board Advisory Board Council (1976–80), and the Institute of Management Accountants – Board of Regents (1981–84). He also spent 30 years teaching at Stanford University, where he was the Edmund W. Upon completion of his PhD at the University of Chicago, he taught at Marquette University, the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and the University of Chicago. Horngren, 1943 graduate of Marquette University, has impacted academe and professional practice through his work in financial and managerial accounting.
Horngren's work has had the most impact in the areas of innovation and business. While Horngren coauthored other financial and managerial accounting textbooks, the current edition of his 1962 text continues to be used throughout the world. Professor Stephen Zeff notes that the book “almost by itself … changed the field” ( Accounting Education News 2012). 877) by Professor William Beaver of Stanford University: “The contribution of Chuck Horngren to my career and that of others is enormous and is an entire topic in and of itself.”In addition to his widespread scholarly publication, Horngren has also received many accolades for his textbook, Cost Accounting: A Managerial Emphasis (1962), for its widespread impact in the field of accounting.
His support of education continues as he and his wife, Joan, have endowed professorships at both Marquette University and Stanford University. The Journal of Accountancy ranked him as one of the top 125 people who have made a significant impact on the accounting profession since 1887.