Professional Scepticism

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Regulators continue to highlight weaknesses in professional scepticism. This course equips accountants and auditors to apply scepticism confidently, particularly in judgement-heavy and fraud-risk areas.

£100 +VAT

4 CPD hours

120 days’ access

Use ACPD101 for 10% off any purchase.

Professional Scepticism

£100 +VAT

4 CPD Course 120 days’ access
Use ACPD101 for 10% off any purchase.

Professional Scepticism

This course is not currently available. To find out more, please get in touch.

This course will enable you to

  • Explain how professional scepticism underpins high quality audit practice and ethical behaviour
  • Understand how professional scepticism and judgement impact accountants and auditors
  • Evaluate the different types of irregularities that an accountant might have to deal with
  • Use judgement to identify fraud, money laundering, and financial irregularity
  • Understand how to use the ISA regulatory requirements for quality control, compliance, and bias management

About the course

Professional scepticism is no longer just encouraged – it is expected. Regulators including the IAASB and FRC repeatedly highlight scepticism and judgement as areas where audits fall short, and high-profile corporate failures have shown the consequences when management is not challenged robustly. In an environment of principles-based standards, fair value estimates, and increased regulatory scrutiny, accountants and auditors must be able to demonstrate, not just assume, that they have applied a questioning mindset.

This course explores the meaning of professional scepticism and how it differs from professional judgement, drawing on regulatory guidance and real-world examples. You’ll examine how scepticism underpins audit quality and ethical behaviour, how to develop and evidence a sceptical mindset, and how judgement is applied in areas such as non-financial assets, financial instruments, impairment, and going concern. The course also addresses the role of scepticism in identifying and responding to fraud, money laundering, and other financial irregularities.

You’ll come away with a clearer understanding of what regulators expect and how to embed scepticism into everyday decision-making. This course will give you practical tools to challenge effectively, document appropriately, and justify your conclusions with confidence. Strengthen your ability to exercise judgement under pressure and protect both audit quality and your professional standing.

Contents

Professional scepticism and judgement

Understanding professional scepticism and judgement
Professional scepticism and judgement in financial reporting
Professional scepticism vs professional judgement
Data analytics and professional scepticism
Regulatory and professional bodies and professional scepticism
A state of mind
What are the regulatory requirements?

Developing and demonstrating a sceptical mindset

How can professional scepticism be developed?
Professional scepticism and audit quality
Regulators and applying professional scepticism
Professional scepticism in an audit
Documenting professional scepticism
Auditor independence and professional scepticism

Professional scepticism and making accounting decisions

Accounting for non-financial assets and liabilities
Revaluation of properties
Financial instruments
Tips for applying professional judgement
Impairment of assets
Assessment of going concern
Professional judgement and going concern

Applying professional scepticism in response to financial irregularities

Corruption fraud and misappropriation of assets
Understanding money laundering
Scepticism, fraud, and financial irregularity
Identifying and responding to suspicious activity
Fraudulent financial reporting
Finding fraud as an auditor

How it works

Author

Lisa Weaver

Lisa Weaver

After qualifying (ICAEW), Lisa spent several years in audit practice with Deloitte and was part of the national audit training faculty at KPMG. Since leaving practice, Lisa has worked in a variety of education-focused roles, including executive education and has maintained strong links with the accountancy professional bodies.