CFP® Board Topic Coverage
Blackboard Site
| Week | Chapter | Topic |
| 08/26 | 1 | INTRODUCTION TO RETIREMENT PLANNING |
| 09/02 | 2 | INTRODUCTION TO RETIREMENT FUNDING |
| 09/09 | 3 | QUALIFIED PLAN OVERVIEW |
| 09/16 | 4 | PENSION PLANS |
| 09/23 | 5 | PROFIT SHARING PLANS |
| 09/30 | First Exam Chapters 1-5 | |
| 10/07 | 6 | STOCK BONUS PLANS AND EMPLOYEE STOCK OWNERSHIP PLANS |
| 10/14 | 7 | DISTRIBUTIONS FROM QUALIFIED PLANS |
| 10/21 | 8 | INSTALLATION, ADMINISTRATION, AND TERMINATION OF QUALIFIED PLANS |
| 10/28 | 9 | IRAS AND SEPS |
| 11/04 | 10 | SIMPLES, 403(b) PLANS, AND 457 PLANS |
| 11/11 | Second Exam Chapters 6-10 | |
| 11/11 | 11 | SOCIAL SECURITY |
| 11/18 | 12 | DEFERRED COMPENSATION AND NONQUALIFIED PLANS |
| 11/25 | Thanksgiving Holiday - No Class | |
| 12/02 | 13 | EMPLOYEE BENEFITS: FRINGE BENEFITS |
| 12/09 | 14 | EMPLOYEE BENEFITS: GROUP BENEFITS |
| 12/16 | Comprehensive Final Examination Tuesday May 4 | |
REASONABLE ACCOMMODATIONS
Instructor: Dr. John P. Yeütter, Ph.D., C.P.A., CFP®
Office: BT 114
Phone: (918) 444-2968
Personal Phone (918) 931-8257
E-Mail: yeutter@nsuok.edu
Class Hours: 17:30-20:10 Tuesdays
Office Hours:
Note:
Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards Inc.
owns the certification marks CFP®, CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ and
,
which it awards to individuals who successfully complete initial and ongoing certification requirements.
Text:: Dalton, Retirement Planning: 4TH EDITION ISBN: 978-0-9748945-8-4
Additional Recommended Resources: It is recommended that the student have a
financial calculator for all class meetings. For Examinations, numeric-display-only calculators may be used only. Cell-Phones, Graphing Calculators, or other electronic devices capable of displaying text and/or graphics are prohibited.
DESCRIPTION:
Prerequisite: Accounting 3003.
OBJECTIVES: At the completion of the course, the student will be able to:
PARTICIPATION: Participation is an important part of the learning process. Being able to pose questions or propose solutions based upon reading or experience is a major portion of active learning and displays more than the ability to memorize, but also the ability to relate what has been read to the real world. Therefore, I expect students to have read the appropriate material before class time, and to come prepared with their questions concerning content and applications.
EVALUATION: Students will be evaluated in several different ways throughout this course.
GRADING: Grades will be based upon formal written examinations and projects
Examinations and assignments are assigned points as follows:
200 OBJECTIVE EXAMS
200 FINAL COMPREHENSIVE EXAM
75 ETHICS PAPER
225 QUIZZES
700 TOTAL POINTS
Grades will be assigned according to the following schedule:
A: > 92% B: 84 - 92% C: 76 - 83% D: 68 - 75%
Any grade appeal must be made within four months after the end of the semester.
INDEPENDENT PRODUCTION: Unless specifically specified as part of the assignment, I expect that all students will work and complete assignments independently. Students who present assignments whose work appears to have been prepared through collaboration will receive a zero (0) for that assignment.
ATTENDANCE: Consistent and punctual attendance is both expected and required for your successful completion of the course. Failure to attend class will affect the grade. ALL absences will indirectly reflect the grade due to the quality of work and material missed. A student is allowed to miss ONE class period without a direct penalty. Beginning with the SECOND class missed, a THREE percent (3%) penalty will be deducted per class missed from the final grade. Under the VERY MOST EXTREME EXIGENT CIRCUMSTANCES, this penalty may be waived. To receive a waiver, students requesting relief under this clause must provide independent verification of these circumstances, in writing, within two (2) days of the missed class period. Students will be expected to make up any work missed as a result of absence, whether or not the absence was justified. In-class exercises and quizzes may not be made up.
ASSIGNMENT DUE DATES: The Online Quizzes are due before the class meets for the Chapter discussed. The Ethics Paper is due at the beginning of the class period on October 21. No work will be accepted at any other time or place than in class and at the appointed time. Projects turned in late will be charged a 10% "late filing" penalty. Assignments slid under the office door will be consumed by a Frumious Bandersnatch or otherwise lost and never graded.
Reading assignments are considered preparation for the lecture period. The student is responsible for all material assigned even if not discussed in class. Late quizzes, or quizzes missed will not be graded.
MISSED TESTS AND LATE ASSIGNMENTS: I believe that feedback is an important part of the learning process, and therefore expect to return exams to you in the period following the exam date. Typically, I provide the answers to the examination to students upon exit from the exam. This poses a problem for those who are unable to take exams at the scheduled time. Students who do not communicate their absence to my by the time a test is completed will receive a zero (0) for that exam. In the case of the VERY MOST EXTREME UNFORSEEN EXIGENT CIRCUMSTANCES, students will be given the opportunity to take only one substitute exam along with the final exam. My determination of whether the VERY MOST EXTREME UNFORSEEN EXIGENT CIRCUMSTANCES existed will be dependent both upon the timeliness of notification by the student of their failure to attend, and upon the reasons given for that failure. Under all circumstances, students requesting relief under this clause must make a written request, and provide independent verification of these circumstances, in writing, within two (2) days of the missed exam.
REASONABLE ACCOMMODATIONS