Professor – Reflector Magazine Georgia Southern University's Student Lifestyle Magazine Wed, 11 Dec 2019 14:56:39 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.4 https://i1.wp.com/reflectorgsu.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/cropped-image_from_ios-1-1.png?fit=32%2C32 Professor – Reflector Magazine 32 32 75821798 Professor Spotlight: Thomas Buckhoff /professor-spotlight-thomas-buckhoff/ /professor-spotlight-thomas-buckhoff/#respond Wed, 11 Dec 2019 14:55:55 +0000 /?p=8005 Photo taken by Mark Donato

Thomas Buckhoff, associate professor of accounting, moved to Statesboro in 2004 to help develop a Forensic Accounting Program at Georgia Southern.

Buckhoff was born in Maryland but lived in many different states growing up. He went to middle and high school in Tupelo, Mississippi. He then attended Itawamba Junior College for two years as a pre-med student.

Buckhoff earned a Bachelor of Science in Accountancy  and a Masters of Accountancy at Brigham Young University (BYU).

After his first two years at the junior college, Buckhoff decided to serve on a two year mission trip for his church in Montevideo, Uruguay.

“It was a very enlightening experience and one life lesson that I learned from that is that money doesn’t buy happiness. Our standard of living here in the US, we take for granted. The people there had nothing, and yet they were happy and here we have all these modern conveniences and things and they don’t even have carpet on the floor.”

Thomas Buckhoff

After finishing the mission, Buckhoff decided to enroll at BYU, a private university in Provo, Utah, where he decided to major in Accounting. 

It was during his time at BYU that he found an interest in Forensic Accounting. Buckhoff said there was an interesting story that led him to Forensic Accounting specifically.

“When I was in my Masters of Accounting program at BYU I had a professor, and I won’t say his name, we’ll call him Dr. Brown,” Buckhoff said. “It was an internal auditing class and it had to have been the worst class I ever took in my entire college career.”

Buckhoff said that they were given an assignment in the class where they had to complete twenty hours of internal audit work and then write a paper explaining what they had learned.

Buckhoff and the other students of the class thought the assignment was ridiculous.

“I thought ‘I know it sounds ridiculous, but I’m just gonna do it,” Buckhoff said.

He then did research and found the state auditor’s office for the state of Utah. He found out that the office does internal audit work so he drove fifty miles north of his university campus to ask if he could work there for the twenty hours needed for the assignment.

Buckhoff explained his assignment to the receptionist and was able to work in the office helping out with a big case they were working on.

“It turns out the audit they were working on was Tempanogos Mental Health Center where the top 3 executives had embezzled 3.5 million dollars from the place over a three year period,” Buckhoff said. “So they were investigating that, and I was fascinated with it.”

Buckhoff said that forensic accountants examine books and records just like regular accountants do, but for a different purpose.

“You’re examining the books and records of the company for evidence of wrongdoing, bringing someone to justice, righting a wrong. You’re doing a lot of the same things but the reason you’re doing it is different, and I found it fascinating.”

Thomas Buckhoff

Buckhoff said that he learned an important lesson from his experience working on the assignment.

Buckhoff learned a lesson from the assignment. He said that the other 39 students in his internal audit class probably thought that the class was the worst class of their entire college career.

“However, I’ll admit that Dr. Brown was awful, but that class actually the most influential class on my career path. Because had I not done his ridiculous assignment, I probably wouldn’t have pursued forensic accounting.”

Buckhoff took his first job as an Assistant Professor at University of Southern Maine in Portland, Maine. He and his family later moved to Fargo, North Dakota where he worked at North Dakota State University where he helped develop a fraud examination and forensic accounting program.

Buckhoff left academia for a year to work for Eide Bailly, LLP in the Fraudwise Division.

In 2004, Buckhoff began working at Georgia Southern and has been here since.

Buckhoff said he loves Georgia Southern and the beautiful campus we have. 

“I enjoy working here and I enjoy working with students. That’s my favorite thing,” Buckhoff said. 

Buckhoff derives personal and professional satisfaction from having students, including former students, contact him when facing a dilemma. He also said he enjoys seeing his former students succeed on their career paths.

Buckhoff is a Certified Public Accountant (CPA), a Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE). He  is Certified in Financial Forensics (CFF) through the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.

In 2016 Buckhoff was recognized  as Educator of the Year by the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE).

Even with his academic and professional achievements, Buckhoff said his greatest accomplishment is raising a family of six kids with his wife Cyndi.

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Professors Were Once College Students Too: Nick Radko /professors-were-once-college-students-too-nick-radko/ /professors-were-once-college-students-too-nick-radko/#respond Mon, 10 Nov 2014 15:00:57 +0000 /?p=392 Sometimes when sitting in class it can be hard to imagine your professors as a regular college student. To us they are our teachers that are all grown up and maybe don’t always understand why we come in late or didn’t get that assignment in on time, but just remember that before having their master’s degrees they were once just like the rest of us.

 

Calling on Professor Nick Radko a Geology Lecturer at Georgia Southern University he completed his Undergraduate degree at the University of Virginia in 2008 and obtained a Graduate degree from the University of Georgia in 2011. Radko had some pretty traditional college stories about his time as a student.

 

Brandon Warnok | Student Media

Brandon Warnok | Student Media

Q: So do you spread yourself two different ways when it comes to UVA and UGA?

 

A: “Yeah I mean for sports and stuff I follow both, people have asked me if Georgia were to play Virginia who would you root for? I say Virginia, I spent more time there.”

 

Q: Did you know what you wanted to teach before you started at Virginia?

 

A: “I considered teaching for a very long time, both my parents were teachers. I understood the job from my folks and liked that they had the summers off. I was a teaching assistant in Grad school and I loved that so I rolled with it.”

 

Q: Which college was a more fun experience?

 

“When I was at Georgia I always thought it would be more fun to be a undergrad at UGA. Not to say I didn’t have a great time at both but Charlottesville is, I don’t want to say more classy but I think I would’ve appreciated it more in my mid twenties.”

 

Q: Do you have any stories specific about Virginia?

 

A: “Sophomore through senior year I worked at a really famous pizza restaurant it was called the best pizza in the world by National Geographic this little hippie joint 20 minutes outside of town in the mountains it was really neat because it was removed from the university population so I got to know more local people and it was a welcome break from the Virginia scene.”

 

A: “The end of the semester classes had ended, this is when Nintendo Wii came out, they were releasing it right before Christmas, my roommate and I were in Best Buy and they had a sign up that they were going to realize the next morning when they opened ten Wii’s, we saw that and we were done with classes, this is a hot item why don’t we go wait in line and sell them on Ebay.

We go back to the apartment and get chairs, huddle up go to KFC get a bucket, get a 12 pack of beer a frizzy football, life is good. Slowly but surely just after 5 o’clock parents come after work, by the next morning 60-70 adults that really just want a Wii for their kids, they do not want to be there. We’re getting a little drunk at this point our friends are coming to visit us, we sat in the line got our Wii’s in the morning and all the adults were pretty mad but we had a great time.”

Brandon Warnok | Student Media

Brandon Warnok | Student Media

 

Q: Do you have any game day stories?

 

A: For UVA there was a tradition that when we played Virginia Tech, for the seniors that we call fourth years that you are supposed to drink a certain amount prior to the Virginia Tech game and the school always made it a noon game. Basically the school thought that the students wouldn’t be able to get drink all that alcohol before noon, but we would go at midnight before and get this monumental drinking task done. By 6 in the morning we are pretty well off, it’s cold- late November, we decide we need some heat so we spilled this huge fire in the front yard.

We get the munchies, as you call them, and go to the gas station, get some hot dogs start roasting hot dogs over painted wood with terrible chemicals but we maintained and we finished the allotment of traditional liquor. The game was a good time, I was yelling a lot, but we lost.

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