
By Vincent Howard, CPA | Managing Partner, Howard, Howard and Hodges | SkillAbility for Accounting Firms
Last updated: July 2026 | 14-minute read
Most junior accountant training teaches people how to complete tasks.
Reconcile this account.
Prepare this workpaper.
Code this transaction.
Enter this adjustment.
Roll forward this schedule.
Follow this checklist.
That training matters. Junior staff need technical execution. They need software fluency. They need workflow discipline.
But task completion is not enough.
At some point, a junior accountant has to learn how to look at the work and ask, “Does this actually make sense?”
That is where professional skepticism begins.
The future of accounting training is not teaching staff to trust the output. It is teaching them how to challenge it.
Who I Am and Why You Should Listen
I’ve been in public accounting since 1990. I founded my own firm in 1993, merged it in 2001 to form Howard, Howard and Hodges, and grew it from three people to 50 staff across four locations and multiple states. Our firm was named PASBA Firm of the Year.
Over those years, I have seen the same development gap show up again and again.
Junior staff learn how to perform steps.
But they do not always learn how to question the result.
They can follow a checklist but miss the fact that the answer does not make sense. They can complete a reconciliation but fail to ask why the variance changed. They can prepare a workpaper but leave weak support. They can use software correctly but miss the client context. They can accept an AI-generated summary because it sounds professional.
That is not a character flaw.
It is a training gap.
Since 2020, I’ve built and run a structured workforce development platform that more than a thousand accounting professionals across dozens of PASBA member firms have moved through. The lesson is clear: if firms want staff to move from preparers to reviewers, advisors, and future managers, they have to train professional skepticism before the promotion, not after the mistake.
Why This Matters Now
Professional skepticism has traditionally been discussed in audit. PCAOB standards describe professional skepticism as an attitude that includes a questioning mind and a critical assessment of evidence. PCAOB AU 230 connects professional skepticism to due professional care, and PCAOB AS 1000 frames due professional care as reasonable care, diligence, integrity, compliance, and professional skepticism.
That audit standard matters.
But the mindset matters far beyond audit.
Tax preparers need skepticism when a client explanation does not line up with the numbers.
Bookkeepers need skepticism when a transaction pattern changes without explanation.
Payroll staff need skepticism when setup details look inconsistent.
Advisory staff need skepticism when a client’s financial story does not match the data.
Reviewers need skepticism when workpapers look complete but weakly supported.
And now, AI makes the issue even more urgent.
Journal of Accountancy has reported that AI tools may automate more audit tasks, but human review remains necessary. Journal of Accountancy has also covered generative AI risks for CPA firms, and CPAI/AICPA risk guidance warns firms to evaluate issues like data protection, confidentiality, and tool risk.
That creates a new training reality:
Work can look finished before anyone has proven it is right.
That is exactly why junior accountants need professional skepticism training.
1. Professional Skepticism Is Not Just for Auditors
Audit firms have long used the phrase professional skepticism.
But the underlying behavior belongs in every CPA firm workflow.
Professional skepticism is not cynicism.
It is not assuming the client is wrong.
It is not being difficult.
It is not slowing the work for no reason.
Professional skepticism means the accountant does not blindly accept the first answer, the prior-year pattern, the software output, the client explanation, or the AI-generated workpaper without asking whether it makes sense.
| Firm Workflow | What Skepticism Looks Like | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Bookkeeping | Question unusual transactions, missing support, or inconsistent coding | Prevents clean-looking books from hiding weak assumptions |
| Tax preparation | Question incomplete organizer responses, unusual changes, or unsupported deductions | Improves accuracy and planning awareness |
| Payroll | Question setup inconsistencies, pay changes, and classification issues | Reduces compliance and client service risk |
| Cleanup work | Question prior-year balances, recurring adjustments, and unexplained variances | Stops staff from copying old errors forward |
| AI-generated workpapers | Test the output, verify the support, and challenge the conclusion | Prevents polished language from replacing professional judgment |
Professional skepticism is a quality habit.
It helps staff move from “I completed the task” to “I understand why this result is reasonable.”
2. Why Junior Staff Struggle to Question Work
Junior accountants often struggle with professional skepticism for understandable reasons.
They lack context.
They lack pattern recognition.
They lack confidence.
They may not know what “wrong” looks like yet.
They may assume the prior year was correct.
They may assume the software output is reliable.
They may assume the AI-generated explanation is accurate because it sounds polished.
They may be afraid to challenge a client, a senior, a manager, or an output created by a tool they do not fully understand.
That is why skepticism has to be trained.
Why Junior Staff Accept Work Too Quickly
High training need
High training need
Confidence gap
Review risk
Emerging risk
Visual framework based on SkillAbility’s development-first approach: junior accountants need structured practice to move from task completion to questioning, judgment, and review readiness.
Junior staff do not become skeptical just because a manager tells them to “think more critically.”
They need examples.
They need scenarios.
They need planted errors.
They need permission to ask better questions.
They need to learn how experienced accountants spot trouble.
3. AI Makes Skepticism More Important, Not Less
AI will change accounting work.
It already is.
AI tools can draft summaries, analyze documents, generate workpaper language, assist with research, identify patterns, and speed up routine work.
That can be valuable.
But AI also creates a dangerous training risk for junior staff.
It can make work look more complete than it really is.
An AI-generated explanation may sound confident but miss context.
An AI-generated workpaper may summarize information without identifying missing support.
An AI-assisted reconciliation may look organized but still require human judgment.
An AI-generated conclusion may be plausible but unsupported.
The risk is not only that AI makes mistakes.
The deeper risk is that junior staff may not know how to test the output.
| AI Output | What Junior Staff Must Learn to Ask | Skepticism Skill |
|---|---|---|
| Draft workpaper summary | Does the summary match the evidence? | Evidence testing |
| AI research answer | Is the source reliable, current, and applicable? | Source evaluation |
| Variance explanation | Does this explanation fit the client facts? | Context testing |
| Client email draft | Is this clear, accurate, and safe to send? | Professional communication judgment |
| Draft conclusion | What assumption is this conclusion relying on? | Assumption testing |
This is why firms should not think AI reduces the need for training.
AI changes what training has to emphasize.
Staff still need execution skills.
But they also need review judgment, evidence testing, source evaluation, and escalation discipline.
AI can produce output. It cannot replace a junior accountant’s responsibility to question whether the output is right.
For a deeper look at review readiness, read How to Reduce Review Notes in Accounting Without Turning Managers Into Editors.
4. The Problem With Checklist Training
Checklists are useful.
Every firm needs them.
Checklists help staff avoid missed steps. They create consistency. They reduce ambiguity. They make expectations visible.
But checklists can also create a false sense of competence.
A junior accountant can complete every checklist step and still fail to question whether the result makes sense.
That is the danger.
Checklist training can create compliance behavior without judgment.
| Checklist Behavior | Skeptical Judgment |
|---|---|
| “I completed the step.” | “Does the result make sense?” |
| “The software accepted it.” | “Is the input correct and supported?” |
| “It matched prior year.” | “Should it match prior year?” |
| “The client said it was correct.” | “Does the client explanation match the evidence?” |
| “AI summarized it.” | “What did AI miss, assume, or overstate?” |
The solution is not to get rid of checklists.
The solution is to train staff to use checklists as a floor, not a ceiling.
A checklist should help staff complete the work.
Skepticism helps them question whether the completed work is reliable.
5. How to Teach Skepticism Through Scenarios
You cannot teach skepticism only through lectures.
You teach it through situations.
Junior staff need to practice seeing what is wrong, incomplete, inconsistent, unsupported, or suspicious before live client work makes the lesson expensive.
That means scenario-based training.
How CPA Firms Can Train Junior Staff to Question the Work
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Give staff workpapers with intentional mistakes so they practice spotting what reviewers catch.
Train staff to identify missing support, incomplete client responses, and weak evidence.
Use scenarios where the client explanation, workpaper, and source documents do not agree.
Teach staff to ask what changed, why it changed, and whether the explanation is sufficient.
Give staff AI-generated summaries with subtle mistakes and make them verify the output.
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Use planted errors
Planted errors are one of the simplest ways to build judgment.
Give staff a workpaper that looks finished but contains problems:
- A missing support document
- A classification error
- A prior-year assumption copied forward incorrectly
- A variance explanation that does not match the numbers
- An open item marked as resolved
- A client explanation accepted without evidence
Then ask the staff member to identify what a reviewer would question.
Use incomplete source documents
Real client work is rarely perfect.
Staff need to learn how to spot missing documents, unclear support, incomplete answers, and gaps between what the client provided and what the work requires.
Use conflicting facts
This is where skepticism gets stronger.
Give staff three facts that do not fully agree.
The client says one thing. The bank statement suggests another. The prior-year file shows a third pattern.
Then train staff to ask, “What do we know? What do we not know? What should be confirmed before review?”
Use unusual variances
Variances are not just numbers to explain.
They are signals.
Junior staff should learn to ask what changed, whether the explanation fits, whether the variance is reasonable, and whether something should be escalated.
Use AI-generated work with subtle mistakes
This will become increasingly important.
Give staff an AI-generated workpaper summary, reconciliation explanation, tax research summary, or client email draft that contains a subtle problem.
Then require them to test it.
Did AI overstate the conclusion? Did it miss a missing document? Did it use confident language without support? Did it assume a fact not in evidence? Did it ignore client context?
That is how firms train junior staff to supervise AI instead of simply using it.
6. What Junior Staff Should Learn to Ask
Skepticism improves when staff learn better questions.
Junior accountants need a simple question set they can apply across bookkeeping, tax, payroll, advisory, cleanup, AI workpapers, and review preparation.
| Question | What It Teaches | Where It Applies |
|---|---|---|
| Does this make sense? | Reasonableness | Every workflow |
| What changed? | Variance awareness | Monthly close, tax, advisory |
| What is missing? | Evidence discipline | Workpapers, support, client responses |
| What assumption am I relying on? | Assumption testing | AI output, tax positions, advisory conclusions |
| What would the reviewer question? | Review readiness | Before submission |
| When should I escalate? | Judgment and risk awareness | Every client-facing workflow |
Those questions are simple.
But they change how staff approach the work.
Instead of asking only, “Did I finish?” the staff member starts asking, “Would this hold up under review?”
That is the beginning of review judgment.
7. How Skepticism Connects to Review Readiness
Review readiness is not just clean formatting.
It is not just a completed checklist.
It is not just a file submitted on time.
Review-ready work is work another professional can understand, evaluate, and rely on without decoding the staff person’s thought process.
Skepticism helps create that.
Staff who question their own work before submitting it create fewer avoidable review notes.
They document better.
They flag open items earlier.
They explain assumptions more clearly.
They notice unusual patterns.
They escalate before the manager discovers the issue in review.
Staff who question their own work before submitting it create fewer review notes after submitting it.
That does not mean review notes disappear.
They should not.
Good review notes protect quality and teach judgment.
But repeated basic notes should decline when staff learn to think like reviewers before they become reviewers.
8. A 30-60-90 Day Professional Skepticism Training Plan
Professional skepticism cannot be taught in one meeting.
It needs practice, feedback, and repetition.
Here is a practical 90-day structure.
| Timeframe | Goal | Firm Action | What to Measure |
|---|---|---|---|
| Days 1–30 | Teach questioning habits | Introduce the core questions: Does this make sense? What changed? What is missing? What assumption am I relying on? | Question quality, documentation awareness, and ability to identify missing support |
| Days 31–60 | Practice with scenarios | Use planted errors, incomplete documents, unusual variances, conflicting facts, and AI-generated workpapers with subtle mistakes | Issues identified, assumptions challenged, escalation decisions, and explanation quality |
| Days 61–90 | Connect skepticism to live work | Require staff to submit work with a short reviewer note explaining what they questioned, what remains open, and what needs attention | Review-note reduction, better documentation, earlier escalation, and stronger review readiness |
This structure gives junior staff permission and practice.
It also gives managers evidence.
Not just “this person completed the work.”
Evidence that the person is learning how to question the work.
9. What Firms Should Measure
If you want to build skepticism, measure the behaviors that show it is developing.
Do not measure only completed tasks.
Measure whether staff are learning to identify risk, document reasoning, and escalate appropriately.
Track Whether Junior Staff Are Moving From Preparer to Reviewer
- Number of issues identified before review
- Quality of questions asked
- Missing support identified
- Assumptions documented
- Unusual variances explained or escalated
- AI output errors caught
- Review notes related to judgment
- Review notes related to documentation
- Escalation timing
- Readiness for review or client-facing responsibility
The goal is not to make junior staff suspicious of everything.
The goal is to help them become professionally curious.
They should learn to ask better questions before the manager has to ask them.
10. How SkillAbility Helps Firms Build Professional Skepticism
SkillAbility was built around a simple reality: CPA firms cannot develop reviewers, advisors, and future managers if junior staff only learn how to complete tasks.
They need structured practice.
They need realistic scenarios.
They need review-ready examples.
They need feedback loops.
They need to learn how to question their own work before the reviewer does.
That is why SkillAbility is not just a course library.
It is an accounting workforce development and knowledge-transfer platform.
The SkillAbility Judgment-Building Pathway
Staff learn accounting, tax, payroll, software workflows, documentation, and standards through structured practice before live work exposes gaps.
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Staff move beyond task completion into financial interpretation, client communication, advisory framing, and professional judgment.
Future leaders learn how to review, coach, delegate, protect standards, and develop professional judgment in others.
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BASE: Build execution and review-ready habits
BASE helps new hires and early-career professionals learn accounting, tax, payroll, software workflows, review standards, and documentation habits through structured practice and assessment.
The skepticism value is simple:
Staff cannot question the work effectively until they understand how the work should be done.
MAPS: Build advisory judgment and client confidence
MAPS helps staff develop financial interpretation, client communication, professional presence, advisory thinking, and judgment.
The skepticism value is stronger:
Staff become more valuable when they can explain what they questioned, what they found, and why it matters.
Summit: Build reviewers, managers, and future leaders
Summit prepares high-potential people to review work, coach judgment, protect standards, delegate effectively, and think like future firm leaders.
The skepticism value becomes long term:
Future managers should not learn skepticism only by fixing mistakes after promotion.
That is how firms move junior accountants from preparers to reviewers, advisors, and future managers.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is professional skepticism training for junior accountants?
Professional skepticism training for junior accountants teaches staff to question outputs, evaluate evidence, identify missing support, recognize inconsistencies, challenge assumptions, and escalate concerns. It helps junior staff move beyond task completion into review readiness and judgment.
Is professional skepticism only for auditors?
No. Professional skepticism is most commonly discussed in audit, but the mindset applies across CPA firm work. Tax preparers, bookkeepers, payroll staff, cleanup teams, advisory staff, and reviewers all need to recognize when something does not make sense.
Why do junior accountants struggle with professional skepticism?
Junior accountants often struggle because they lack context, pattern recognition, confidence, and permission to challenge outputs. They may trust prior-year work, software results, client explanations, or AI-generated summaries too quickly because they do not yet know what to question.
How does AI change professional skepticism training?
AI makes professional skepticism more important because AI can produce polished workpapers, summaries, explanations, and draft conclusions that may still contain errors, weak assumptions, missing context, or unsupported reasoning. Junior staff need to learn how to test AI output instead of accepting it.
How can CPA firms teach junior staff to review AI workpapers?
CPA firms can teach junior staff to review AI workpapers by giving them AI-generated examples with subtle mistakes, requiring them to verify support, identify assumptions, compare output to source documents, evaluate conclusions, and document what they questioned before submission.
What questions should junior accountants ask to build skepticism?
Junior accountants should ask: Does this make sense? What changed? What is missing? What assumption am I relying on? Does the support match the conclusion? What would the reviewer question? When should I escalate?
How does professional skepticism reduce review notes?
Professional skepticism reduces avoidable review notes by helping staff identify issues before submission. Staff who question their own work are more likely to document assumptions, flag open items, explain variances, and escalate concerns before the reviewer has to find them.
External Research and Authority Sources
- PCAOB AU 230: Due Professional Care in the Performance of Work
- PCAOB AS 1000: General Responsibilities of the Auditor
- Journal of Accountancy: How AI Is Transforming the Audit — and What It Means for CPAs
- Journal of Accountancy: Generative AI and Risks to CPA Firms
- CPAI/AICPA: Generative AI and Risks to CPA Firms
- AICPA & CIMA: Professional Responsibilities
- ACFE: The 6 Most Common Behavioral Red Flags of Fraud
The Bottom Line
Most junior accountant training teaches people how to complete tasks.
The firms that develop stronger people teach them how to question the task.
Professional skepticism is not something junior accountants magically develop after enough busy seasons.
It has to be trained.
They need examples.
They need scenarios.
They need planted errors.
They need AI workpapers to test.
They need permission to challenge assumptions.
They need to learn what reviewers question before they become reviewers themselves.
The future of accounting training is not teaching staff to trust the output. It is teaching them how to challenge it.
Train execution.
Then train skepticism.
Then train judgment.
Then train client confidence.
That is how junior accountants become reviewers, advisors, managers, and future firm leaders.
Protect knowledge.
Develop people.
Scale the firm.
Want junior accountants who can question the work before your managers have to fix it?
SkillAbility helps CPA and accounting firms replace shadowing, repeated explanations, and tribal knowledge with structured practice that builds execution, review readiness, professional skepticism, advisory judgment, and leadership capability.
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To your firm’s capacity,
Vincent Howard, CPA
Managing Partner, Howard, Howard and Hodges
SkillAbility for Accounting Firms
About the Author
Vincent Howard, CPA has practiced public accounting since 1990. He holds a Master’s degree in Taxation from the University of Central Florida, leads a 50-person multi-state firm, and built the SkillAbility staff development platform used by accounting firms nationwide through the PASBA network. Howard, Howard and Hodges was named PASBA Firm of the Year and has offices in Lake Mary, Sarasota, and Winter Springs, Florida.
© 2026 SkillAbility for Accounting Firms. 45-Day Out-of-Pocket Performance Guarantee applies to qualifying onboarding engagements. Contact us for full terms.
