Webcast
Instructor
Rosemary E. Weiss began her career in public accounting in 1964 with the International CPA firm of Coopers & Lybrand, LLP (then Lybrand, Ross Bros. and Montgomery.) After five years, Ms. Weiss started her own firm, Weiss & Company, where she practiced for 21 years before merging with Coopers & Lybrand LLP in 1990. In 1997, she retired from public practice.
Ms.Weiss is a past president of the State Board of Accountancy and was a member of the Board from 1986 to 1999.
Instructor
Instructor
Keely Gohl CPA, CGMA
Keely Gohl obtained her Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees in Accountancy from the University of Denver. The first 14 years of her career were with KPMG – 11 years in the Audit practice, 3 years in the National Industry Learning & Development office. Keely decided to use her experience to give back to organizations who had helped her along the way. She served the University of Denver (in the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences divisions) as the Director of Budget and Planning from 2012 to 2016. She then served the Denver Dumb Friends League as Controller from 2016 to 2018. She went on to serve as the Director of Finance & Administration for a local church that also ran a pre-K through 8th school. Her service in not-for-profits helped her to realize that many organizations need the expertise of a CPA but do not always have the resources they need to employ one full-time. This led her to form her own consulting business, Favor Financial LLC, to help organizations with that expertise. She launched this in May 2019. This has also allowed her time to re-engage in executive education – which she loves! She is currently developing and instructing executive education courses for the Colorado Society of CPAs, CPA Crossings LLC, the University of Denver Daniel’s College of Business, and other private clients. Outside of work, she volunteers her time organizing Douglas County High School’s After Prom events annually, serving on various boards and committees, mentoring others, and being a dedicated wife and mother (the role she loves the most).
Instructor
My work is centered around ethics and epistemology, especially the idea of epistemic injustice. In what ways is it morally problematic to not take other people seriously? What methods are effective at reducing the impact of prejudice on members of marginalized groups during interpersonal exchanges? I have a PhD from the Philosophy-Neuroscience-Psychology program at Washington University in St. Louis. In addition to epistemic injustice, I do work related to bioethics, social epistemology, and moral psychology.
Get all four ethics credits in one day with our May Ethics Day!