Accounting
From ACCT 210 to auditing, tax, and upper-level accounting.
Accounting, finance, economics, marketing, information systems, and law. If you study business at AUB or LAU, we have classes and private support for the courses giving you trouble.
Business roadmap
Business Foundations
Financial Accounting • Microeconomics • Macroeconomics
Quantitative and Core Major Work
Managerial Accounting • Corporate Finance • Operations Management
Track Depth
Intermediate Accounting I & II • Investments • Econometrics
Featured Classes
8
Recordings
7
Focus Areas
8
Current live classes and structured semester support for business students.
On-demand review for accounting, finance, economics, and high-stakes revision.
Courses We Cover
These course entries link deeper into Simple A's public course pages and give students a clear next step beyond generic category browsing.
CMPS 279 Arts and Sciences Course
View courseCMPS 244 Arts and Sciences Course
View courseBUSS 200 Business Course
View courseMNGT 215 Business Course
View courseMKTG 210 Business Course
View courseINFO 200 Business Course
View courseDCSN 200 Business Course
View courseFINA 210 Business Course
View courseBusiness Subjects We Tutor
From first-year accounting to upper-level finance and economics — these are the areas we tutor best at AUB and LAU.
From ACCT 210 to auditing, tax, and upper-level accounting.
Corporate finance, investments, markets, and modeling.
Micro, macro, econometrics, and applied economics.
Statistics, analytics, operations, and quantitative work.
Consumer behavior, research, strategy, and digital.
MIS, databases, ERP, and technology management.
Commercial law, contracts, and regulatory frameworks.
OB, strategic management, HR, leadership, and entrepreneurship.
How Tutoring Works
Weekly classes for structure. Private tutoring sessions and project help when you need something specific.
Small groups, worked examples, past exams. A steady pace all semester long.
When you need to catch up fast, understand a hard concept, or prepare before midterms.
Help with case studies, reports, research papers, and capstone projects.
Focused review on the types of questions that actually show up on your exams.
Business Roadmap
This is a practical AUB and LAU-style business flow: first the core language of business, then major depth, then upper-level strategy, cases, projects, and harder exams.
Step 1
The first pressure points are usually accounting, economics, introductory management, statistics, and business law.
How students usually use Simple A here
This is where weekly classes help most because students are still building the language of business courses.
Step 2
Once the basics are in place, students usually move into intermediate accounting, corporate finance, marketing, MIS, and operations.
How students usually use Simple A here
This is usually the point where students need course-specific tutors, not just general subject help.
Step 3
The path becomes more specialized depending on whether the student leans toward accounting, finance, economics, MIS, marketing, or management.
How students usually use Simple A here
Students usually switch between weekly support, private tutoring, and recordings depending on professor style and exam difficulty.
Step 4
Upper-level strategy, auditing, tax, analytics, cases, and capstone projects need more targeted review and sharper exam preparation.
How students usually use Simple A here
This is where project help, case support, and focused revision sessions matter most.
Common Business Paths
Once the basics are done, the help usually becomes path-specific. This makes it easier to see where you are and what support comes next.
Starts with financial and managerial accounting, then moves into intermediate, cost, auditing, and tax.
Usually builds from intro finance into corporate finance, investments, valuation, and markets.
Begins with micro and macro, then gets harder through intermediate theory, econometrics, and applied economics.
Often combines management, organizational behavior, marketing, operations, and systems work before strategy-heavy courses.
If it is a business course, we probably have a class or support option for it.