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COURSE OUTLINE |
| Class Times: 9:00am - 16:00pm weekend B, Term V
Class Location: Ed Center, Heidelberg
Lecturer: Joyce M. Rowe, Ph.D. Office Hours: 1/2 hr. before and Phone: 0179-533-5354 after class; by appointment e-mail: jrowe@faculty.ed.umuc.edu Course Credit: 3 semester hours Pre-requisite: Advancement to candidacy in the MIS program and successful completion of the graduate MIS comprehensive examination TEXTBOOK: Articles from current journals and periodicals; other materials as appropriate HANDOUTS: Will be distributed from time-to-time; you will be responsible for this material COURSE DESCRIPTION A capstone course designed to expose the student to the various areas of information systems in the organization where concepts from other core courses can be utilized. The focus is on information science research, policy formation and issues. Students produce an analytical/scientific paper within their chosen area of organizational interest. GRADING CRITERIA: |
| Research Proposal* (and presentation) | 15 points |
| Research Paper | 35 points |
| Presentation of research | 15 points |
| Examination | 10 points |
| Active and constructive participation | 25 points |
GRADING SCALE:
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| Research Proposal* -- The Research
Proposal will contain the Statement of the Problem, Need for the Study,
Definition of Terms, Review of the Literature, and Statement of the Hypothesis
or Research Question. Topics to be studied must be approved by the
lecturer before work commences. Proposals will be presented to the
class using appropriate presentation techniques, with an outline of the
literature review provided to all class members.
Research Paper--Students will complete a research study and write an accompanying paper. The paper will be 30 - 40 pages in length and will follow the recognized scientific research format as provided in the Guide distributed by the lecturer. All papers will follow the APA format and will be single spaced to provide easy publication to the UMUC web site. Papers will be submitted to the Lecturer in hard copy AND on disk in final format. Students are requested to access the UMUC library site, www.umuc.edu/library, for information on research tools and writing styles. Additionally, a brief summary of APA style may be found at www.ldl.net/~bill/aparev.htm and at owl.english.purdue.edu/Files/30A.html. For your paper, due to the html formatting, the title and table of contents pages should be kept in a separate file from the remainder of the paper. Presentation of Research -- Students will present their research finding and conclusions to the class using appropriate audio-visual and handout materials. The in-class presentation should run approximately 40 minutes with another 10-15 minutes allowed for questions and discussion. Members of the class as well as the instructor will contribute in evaluating and providing feedback on the quality of the subject matter, the research, and the presentation. Evaluation and feedback are considered part of class participation. Examination -- An take-home exam will be given on the third weekend. It will encompass questions concerning methods of research, research analysis, and topics covered through classroom discussions. Class Participation -- The essence of a seminar is the exchange of information. Seminar members are expected to come to class prepared, to accept responsibility for one or more parts of the seminar process, to ask through-provoking questions, and to participate fully and carry their weight in the class discussions. |
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| The following policies apply to this class.
These policies are generally reflected in the graduate catalog.
* ACADEMIC HONESTY: Students are expected to do their own work. Cheating on tests, plagiarism on written assignments, or any other form of academic dishonesty will result in a "0" for the assignment. Note that a D or an F usually results in at least 60 or 50 points, where violation of academic honesty results in none. See the European Division Catalog for the UMUC policy on academic dishonesty and plagiarism. * ASSIGNMENT/TEST SCHEDULES: Students are expected to complete all assignments and when they are due. If a student fails to complete any assignment or test, the resulting grade will be a "0," rather than an "F." * CLASS PREPARATION: Students are expected to come to class prepared. This means they should have read the materials assigned for class for that session and have prepared any pertinent assignments. Quizzes may be given. * METHOD OF INSTRUCTION -- As a graduate seminar, the major method of instruction is the regular exchange of ideas between members of the class. A seminar is "a small group of advanced students in a college or graduate school engaged in original research under the guidance of a professor who meets regularly with them for reports and discussions." |
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| Students successfully completing this
course should:
Evaluate the credibility of a research study Identify and apply the techniques included in Scientific
Methodology, including
Develop techniques for conducting a thorough literature search in the field Identify, describe and model procedures for data gathering and their consequences Develop data reporting and analysis techniques Develop technical writing skills Understand the importance of research to the MIS professional 2. Writing Skills: Students should improve writing skills through development of the Research Proposal and the Research Paper. 3. Oral Presentation Skills: Students should improve their presentation skills through their oral report on the major project, individual reports on current topics and issues, and class discussions. 4. Computer Skills: Students are expected to improve their computer skills by using word processing and project management software. The use of Internet and e-mail are also encouraged. |
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| Class 1
June 9 9:00-noon |
Introductions; Discuss the syllabus; discuss "research" and "reporting;" review the Research Guide; discuss relevance of course to IS. | Assignment: Read the Research Guide |
| Class 2
June 9 1:00-4:00 |
Why do Research; Chapters of the Research Paper; Defining Level 1 and Level 2 Journals | Assignment: Develop a list of six current topics in the area of Information Systems. Then, develop questions that "need to be answered" by the industry about these issues. |
| Class 3
June 10 9:00-noon |
Techniques for Gathering Information; Developing Measurements; Operational Definitions in Research | Assignment: Select a research question. |
| Class 4
June 10 1:00-4:00 |
Designing Experiments; Statistical Analysis | Assignment: Begin the literature review on your topic. Search for a quality research paper and a report on the same topic, read and be prepared to discuss; continue lit review. |
| Class 5
June 23 9:00-noon |
Distinguish a "scientific" research effort from a "report"; Identifying applied vs. basic research; Turn in Chapter 1 | |
| Class 6
June 23 1:00-4:00 |
Student-led In-class discussions on topics | Assignment: On the web find 2 - 3 articles concerning your topic that are reports |
| Class 7
June 24 9:00-noon |
Student-led In-class discussions on topics from assignment | Assignment: Read the Guide to Writing and Research; Grammar, Writing, and Bibliographic Guide, and Research Skills Tutorial on the UMUC Library web site |
| Class 8
June 24 1:00-4:00 |
Discussion of Writing Skills and Writing formats | Assignment: Presentation of Research Proposal; continue lit review; Take-home exam |
| Class 9
July 7 9am-noon |
Turn in Chapter 2; Presentations of Research Proposals and discussions | Turn in exam over the internet by June 30, 12 midnight, GMT |
| Class 10
July 7 1:00-4:00 |
Discussion of Bibliography and Appendices; Presentations continued | Assignment: Bibliography completed; Look up current publications |
| Class 11
July 8 9am-noon |
Turn in Bibliography, Discuss methods for presentations | |
| Class 12
July 8 1:00-4:00 |
Summarizing and Reporting Findings of Research | Assignment: Determine how the study will be analyzed; Complete Bioliography and appendices; update on current issues and topics |
| Class 13
July 21 9:00-noon |
Turn in Chapter 3; In-progress research paper review; topic discussions | |
| Class 14
July 21 1:00-4:00 |
Current issues and topics | Assignment: Prepare for Research presentations |
| Class 15
July 22 9:00-noon |
Course evaluations; "What are the lessons learned?"; Research presentations | |
| Class 16
July 22 1-4 pm |
Research presentations | |
PRELIMINARY LIST OF PUBS
Level 1 Research Journals (also on line)
IBM Systems Journal
AT&T Technical Journal
Harvard Business Review
Communications of the ACM The Economist
Scientific American
Sloan Management Review
IEEE Communications
MIS Quarterly
IEEE Software
Level 2 or 3 Research Journals (also on line)
Business Week
Information Week
Communications Week
Datamaton
Byte
LAN Times
CIO
InfoWorld
Network World
Computer World
Information Week
Wired