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Open finance classes Jan. - June 2022, including Travel

Posted: December 7, 2021

The following finance classes are available from January 2022 through June 2022 and are open to any person interested in learning more about Cornell accounting/finance, payroll, and procurement policies. Please register via CULearn (click the registration link in the description below to view open class dates, times, and locations).

How to Find Classes

There are also over 180 tutorials in CULearn ranging from using KFS e-docs and OAS Dashboards to certificate programs. To find these classes, search using these terms:

  • For Kuali Financial System, KFS
  • For DFS or accounting, FIN or ACCT
  • For reporting, KFSIDR
  • For risk management, RMI
  • For payroll, PAY
  • For procurement/purchasing, PUR
  • For cash management, CASH
  • For effort certification, FINEFFRT
  • For Concur or travel, TRAVEL
    • Concur tutorials and videos are also available on the Travel at Cornell and Concur website.

How to Take Classes

ALL the following classes are held REMOTELY/VIRTUALLY via ZOOM. You will receive a confirmation email after you register that contains a link to the class page. A launch button that opens the Zoom meeting will appear on the class page 20 minutes before the class start time.

Available Courses

Accounting Certification Program

Anyone in a service center role is required to complete the Accounting Certification Program within 18 months of employment and re-certify every 3 years.

The Accounting Certification Program (ACP) helps employees develop and enhance accounting skills and knowledge by providing an overview of the accounting function, as well as detailed training on the use of specific accounting tools and their associated policies and procedures. The ACP is constantly growing/changing. As core courses become available, you can take them individually and apply them to the certification.

To obtain credit for the course and eventual certification, staff members taking any ACP core course must pass an open-book exam for each class.

The following courses will be part of the redesigned program (you must take one elective). See the individual course pages for more information. Also see below for a description of these and other classes.

  • ACCT-101 Cornell Accounting 101
  • FIN 101 Policy Considerations in Accounting
  • FIN 104 Financial Stewardship and Ethical Conduct
  • FIN 108 Unallowable Expenses
  • FIN 111 Processing Capital Assets and Physical Inventory (elective)
  • FIN 114 Financial Management of Sponsored Projects (Part 1 and Part 2)
  • FIN 115 Financial Reporting Dashboard, Sponsored Financial Activity (elective)
  • FIN 202 Reconciliation of Assets and Liabilities and Monitoring Operating Accounts
  • FIN 203 Internal Controls at Cornell University
  • KFSIDR 1040 The Wonderful World of Web Fin II (elective)
  • KFSIDR 1050 Using KFS Dashboards to Manage Accounts and Transactions
  • RMI 100 Everything You Wanted to Know About Risk Management and Insurance (required prerequisite: RMI 99 Risk Management and Insurance)

Register for the Accounting Certification Program (all classes are listed in one place for easy registration)

Cornell Accounting 101

This course is for staff members who work with accounting information or who are new to Cornell accounting methods. The three-session program uses a mixture of online and traditional classroom learning. There is an online, open-book exam after each session (a total of 3 exams) that must be completed along with all three sessions to receive credit. Exams do not need to be completed before attending the next session.

Session I: An online prerequisite for sessions II and III, this session provides an online introduction to accounting topics and policies such as the accounting equation; assets, liabilities, and fund balance accounting; debits and credits; ethics; compliance and methods, the Cornell accounting structure; and commonly used accounting terms. Approximate completion time is 20-30 minutes (not including the exam).

Session II: This classroom session will cover topics such as debits and credits; organizations (orgs) and the org structure; account types; the Cornell accounting string (account, sub-account, object codes, sub-object codes, project codes, org ref ID); restriction classifications (unrestricted, temporarily, permanently); account attributes (fund, sub-fund, sub-fund program); and higher education function codes.

Session III: This classroom session will tie together the topics covered in Session II by reviewing KFS, including creating/updating an account; creating a sub-account; creating a sub-object code; closing accounts; viewing account balances; understanding general ledger (GL) pending entries and self-balancing accounts; measuring accounting information; accounting fiscal periods; reporting accounting information (dashboards and Web Financials II).

Instructors

Accounting staff members and Steve Jackson, ODE

Register for ACCT 101

FIN 101: Policy Considerations at Cornell

Policy Considerations at Cornell comes back to life from the pre-KFS days in this new, self-paced online course that covers several university policies, including 3.14, Business Expenses; 4.2, Transaction Authority and Payment Approval; and 4.6, Standards of Ethical Conduct; along with various citizenship and tax information.

Register for FIN 101

FIN 104: Financial Stewardship and Ethical Conduct (UPDATED Fall 2021)

Prerequisite: To register for this class you must have completed SUPERHR7002 Financial Stewardship and Ethical Conduct.

For all staff members who work with accounting information and who are new to Cornell accounting methods, this class will cover topics including responsibilities for stewardship and fiduciary responsibility at the university, types of accountabilities, policy resources, standards of ethical conduct, transaction authority reviews and payment approvals, conflicts, financial irregularities, internal controls, risk assessment and monitoring controls. We will also review several case studies based on the material presented. You will take a 30-minute tutorial, and then in class we will cover case studies and scenarios based on the above topics.

Instructors

Cornell University Audit Office staff members and Steve Jackson, ODE

Register for FIN 104

FIN 108: Unallowable Expenses

Suggested Prerequisite: Accounting 101 (see above) or a minimum of 3-6 months experience working with Cornell accounts.

This course defines allowable and unallowable costs from the vantage point of the university and the federal government. Excerpts from the new Uniform Guidance (2 CFR 200) will be discussed in detail. Other topics include how to code federal unallowable transactions, how federal unallowable costs affect the facilities and administrative rate calculation, and the review process for federal unallowable costs.

Instructors

Cost and Capital Assets staff members and Steve Jackson, ODE

Register for FIN 108

FIN 111- Processing Capital Assets and Physical Inventory

This class will provide an overview of the capital assets policy and thresholds. Topics covered include Cornell’s definition of a capital asset; the importance of keeping capital asset records current; handling sponsor-owned equipment; tagging assets; and working with the surplus and disposal processes. KFS topics include pre-asset tagging, editing assets, transferring assets, loaning, or returning equipment, fabrication of assets, retiring assets, and conducting the barcode inventory process. (This course replaces KFSCAM-600.)

Instructors

Capital Assets staff members and Steve Jackson, ODE

Register for FIN 111

FIN 112- Accounting for Leases at Cornell University

This course/tutorial covers a variety of Cornell policies and procedures for managing and accounting for leases including the decision making needed to identify leases and non-leases.

Register for FIN 112

FIN 114: Financial Management of Sponsored Projects

NOTE: This is a two-part program. Please make sure you pay attention to class dates and times because they will be on separate days.

This two-part course will provide a foundation for managing sponsored projects.

Part 1: Sponsored Financial-Managing Sponsored Projects is an overview of sponsored projects, including the life cycle, research administration at Cornell, and general principles surrounding oversight of a project. 1.5 hours. For those who have completed Research Administration Certification Program (RACP), Part I is not required but you still need to register for the entire course, attend Part 2, and pass the exam.

Part 2: Sponsored Financial-Managing Sponsored Accounts is an overview of project accounts associated with a sponsored activity. Includes time for testing and reviewing accounts in the Kuali Financial System. 1.5 hours.

This course is the foundation for Financial Management of Sponsored Activity and a prerequisite for these courses in this suite:

  • FIN 115 - Sponsored Financial-Financial Reporting Dashboard (Sponsored Financial Activity)
  • FIN 116 - Sponsored Financial-Post Award Administration Requirements (Online Modules)

Instructors

Sponsored Financial Services staff members

Register for FIN 114

FIN 115: Financial Reporting Dashboard, Sponsored Financial Activity

We strongly encourage you to complete (or be currently taking) FIN 114 - Financial Management of Sponsored Projects before taking this course.

This course is an overview of the Sponsored Financial Activity dashboard, which presents financial activity associated with sponsored projects. You will learn how to analyze your project by reviewing the current financial status and monitoring activity on a regular basis.

Attendees should have general dashboard knowledge (completed KFSIDR-1050) and an interest (current or future) in managing sponsored activity. Access to this dashboard follows the general accounting role and may be restricted by local college access.

Instructors

Sponsored Financial Services staff members

Register for FIN 115

FIN 116: Financial Reporting Dashboard, Sponsored Financial Activity

We strongly encourage you to complete (or be currently taking) FIN 114 - Financial Management of Sponsored Projects before taking this course.

This course comprises thirteen distinct online modules and provides an overview of Uniform Guidance Post-Award Federal Requirements. You will learn how to manage and navigate post-award financial administration of a sponsored project.

Topics include administrative rules, budget analysis, cost principles, salary certification, participant costs, equipment, cost share, indirect costs, subawards, program income and financial monitoring.

Register for FIN 116

FIN 118: Determining the Facilities & Administrative (F&A) Cost Rate

This program provides greater understanding of the development of the Facilities and Administrative (F&A) cost rate and will be valuable for those working with sponsored grants and contracts or managing F&A recoveries at a college or university level. The session will provide an overview of the processes involved in developing the F&A cost rate, including the impact of coding of accounts, the treatment of unallowable expenses and activities, the impact of cost sharing, the importance of properly coding space usage, and a case study of how the numbers are all put together.

Register for FIN 118

FIN 201: Developing User Fees for Service Facilities and Recharge Operations

This workshop provides to recharge operation and service facility managers the background and knowledge necessary to develop accurate, equitable, and compliant user fees. Topics covered include key definitions, relevant regulations and policies, key requirements of University Policy 3.10, Recharge Entities, the difference between recharge operations and service facilities, which costs can and cannot be recovered through user fees, how to calculate user fees, how to handle subsidies (user fee and user subsidies), applicable accounting procedures, the review and approval process, and common problems/deficiencies.

Instructors

Cost and Capital Asset Staff

Register for FIN 201

FIN 202: Reconciliation of Assets and Liabilities and Monitoring Operating Accounts 

Prerequisites: Accounting 101 and KFSIDR-1050

This class is for staff members responsible for monitoring revenue and expenses for Cornell, state, federal or contract and grants accounts, as well as performing account reconciliations.

This three-hour class provides guidelines for reconciling asset and liability object codes and monitoring revenue and expense activity. It will define the difference between a reconciliation and activity monitoring, as well as cover risk assessment, properly recording sales tax, correcting unknown variances, and writing off uncollectible receivables. During the class, we will be using the KFS Dashboards and hands-on exercises to reinforce reconciliation techniques and strategies.

Instructors

Accounting staff members and Steve Jackson, ODE

Register for FIN 202

FIN 203: Internal Controls at Cornell University

All Cornell University employees have a role to play within the university’s internal control framework. This introductory course explains internal controls in general along with the employee’s responsibilities for internal controls within Cornell’s framework.

Topics include the definition of internal controls and why are they important, an overview of Cornell’s internal control framework, challenges that may exist and how to manage them, and key controls.

Instructors

Accounting staff members and Steve Jackson, ODE

Register for FIN 203

KFSIDR 1040: The Wonderful World of WebFin2

Prerequisite: You must have KFS Accounting Dashboards access when registering for this class. If you do not, request access for the KFS Staff Accounting role in Cynergy from your business service center.

Learn how to use the full power of the WebFin2 dashboard to meet your reporting needs. This hands-on class is designed for staff members with accounting responsibilities who need to review and monitor transactional- and summary-level data at the individual account level. Topics discussed include viewing account balances, year-to-date and inception-to-date summary reports, reviewing transactions, drilling from summary reports to transaction details, understanding encumbrances, and using the WebFin2 Account Notes feature.

Users with KFS Labor access will learn how to interpret the summary/name detail views provided in many reports. Many custom navigation features of this dashboard will be explained.

Users will learn how to answer common questions such as: Do I have enough money in my account to make this purchase? How can I find if any of my accounts are in overdraft status? Where can I find information on remaining PO and labor encumbrance balances? How does my account compare to budget? What salaries have been charged to my account? What was purchased at the campus store? We will also cover the extensive OBIEE dashboard tools available, such as changing the sort order and column order in reports, moving report columns to create custom filters and report breaks, adding sub-totals to existing reports, hiding columns to redesign dashboard report format; and saving customized reports for future use.

Instructors

Tim Pollard (CIT) and Debi Littlejohn Controller/FIS

Register for KFSIDR 1040

KFSIDR-1050: Using KFS Dashboards to Manage Accounts and Transactions

Prerequisite: Using KFS Dashboards Overview Tutorial (KFSIDR-1000DASH-Tutorial)

This class combines the previous KFSIDR-1000 and KFSIDR-1100 classes. This hands-on class is designed for transaction specialists who need to review, monitor, and report on transactional activity in their accounts. Learn how to use the financials dashboards to find transactions posted to your accounts, including using page selectors to request data specific to your needs; changing column and sort order; sub-totaling; hiding columns to redesign dashboard report format; and saving customized reports for future use. It is also designed for account representatives and finance specialists who need to manage budget and financial activity in their accounts. Learn how to use the financials dashboards to find funds available, balances for accounts in your organization, and compare financial activity against budgeted allocations. Answer questions such as, Do I have enough money in my account to make this purchase? How can I find if any of my accounts are in overdraft status? How can I monitor asset and liability balances? Where can I find information on remaining PO encumbrance balances? We will also cover changing the sort order in reports, moving report columns to change the display, and adding subtotals to existing reports.

Instructors

Debi Littlejohn Controller/FIS and Steve Jackson, ODE

Register for KFSIDR 1050

RMI 100: Everything You Wanted to Know about Risk Management and Insurance (UPDATED Fall 2021)

Prerequisite: To register for this class you must have completed the RMI 99 Risk Management and Insurance Tutorial

This class consists of pre-class tutorials that are required to attend the classroom activities which will consist of scenarios and case studies. Risk Management is everyone's responsibility. In this class, you will learn how the risk management process can help you become a more effective steward and protect the human, physical, and financial assets of the university. You will gain an understanding of the university's insurance programs, the claim process, and the university policies that are impacted by risk management.

Other topics covered include risk identification, risk rates and exclusions, the cost of allocation, emergency planning and business continuity, insurance claims and incident reporting, deductibles, contractors (paying for services), architects and engineers, certificates of insurance and risk, foreign travel and travel risks, sexual harassment, rental cars, contract risks, use of university property, and use of alcohol.

Instructors

Risk Management and Insurance staff members and Steve Jackson, ODE

Register for RMI 100

PAY 1000: Payroll Certification Program

PAY 1000 Payroll Certification This is a five course, six session program (PAY 101 is TWO sessions with a pre-session tutorial) that will help give you the skills you need to manage the administration of payroll and payroll functions effectively and efficiently. 

Topics:

  • PAY 100 Payroll Essentials: An Introduction to Cornell Payroll
  • PAY 101 Time Tracking (two parts)
  • PAY 102 Absences and Leaves
  • PAY 103 Time Clocks
  • PAY 105 Unions and Workday

Please view the Session Details for each course to see the available class dates and times.

Instructors

Cornell University Payroll staff members

Register for PAY 1000

PAY 104: Treaty Benefits and Taxation for Foreign Nationals

This class is for staff members responsible for working with foreign nationals, dealing with visas, and making payments to foreign nationals.

This is a two-part workshop.

Part I is an online tutorial that covers common definitions, visa types, tax treaties and documentation pertaining to payment processing for foreign nationals. 

Part II is an instructor-led class where we will cover examples and case studies on topics such as determining if an individual is a foreign national; payment types to foreign nationals (honoraria, fee for services, stipends, and wages); and the types of documentation needed to receive treaty benefits and potential exemption from taxes. Participants will also review the Foreign National Questionnaire form and other required documents and backup material.

Instructor

Lori Kanellis, Tax Office

Register for PAY 104

PUR 1000: Procurement Certification Program

PUR 1000 Procurement Certification covers various aspects of the procurement process at Cornell. Participants will be guided through the purchasing decision process including identifying the appropriate payment method, selecting a vendor, processing a purchase order, identifying independent contractors, paying for services, and more.

The program is a series of nine classes with blended models (tutorials) as well as two online tutorials (PUR 99 and RMI 99). You must attend all required classes and complete all tutorials and exams for certification.

The classes required for certification include:

  • PUR 99 Procurement Overview (tutorial)
  • PUR 100 The Basics of Cornell Procurement
  • PUR 101 PCard Use for BSCs
  • PUR 102 Identifying Independent Contractors and Paying for Services
  • PUR 105 Spend Viz
  • PUR 109 Processing Purchase Orders
  • PUR 112 e-SHOP
  • PUR 200 Contracts and Negotiations
  • PUR 201 Vendor Registration and Accounts Payable
  • RMI 99 Risk Management and Insurance (tutorial) (Pre-req for RMI 100)
  • RMI 100 Everything You Wanted to Know About Risk Management and Insurance

Instructors

Cornell University Procurement staff members and Steve Jackson, ODE

Register for PUR 1000

Travel 100: Creating Your Travel Profile in Concur

This course will walk you through setting-up your traveler profile in Concur and cover using Concur mobile apps and some high-level travel policy information that pertains to the subject area.

Instructors

Jen Cornell, SSC and Steve Jackson, ODE

Register for Travel 100

Travel 101: Booking Travel in Concur

It is strongly recommended that the traveler already complete the TRAVEL 100 course prior to coming to this class.

This course will cover the travel booking process using Concur, using other ways to book travel, and entering that information into the Concur travel system. Some high-level travel policy information will also be presented.

Instructors

Jen Cornell, SSC and Steve Jackson, ODE

Register for Travel 101

Travel 102: Creating an Expense Report in Concur

It is strongly recommended that the traveler already complete the TRAVEL 100 course prior to coming to this class.

This course will cover the expense report from beginning to end for travelers needing to complete the travel reimbursement process using the Concur travel system.

Instructors

Jen Cornell, SSC and Steve Jackson, ODE

Register for Travel 102

Tags: 
accounting
internal control
KFS training
Kuali Financial System
reporting
Risk Management
training
travel

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Hours:  8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Monday - Friday

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