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INSS 690

PROFESSIONAL SEMINAR

UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND Education Center, Ramstein

Saturdays/Sundays, Weekend A, 09.00-16.00, Term 1 - 2000-2001

COURSE DESCRIPTION:

  (3 semester hours) Prerequisites: Advancement to candidacy in the MIS program and successful completion of the graduate MIS comprehensive examination. 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.

COURSE OBJECTIVES:

  Students successfully completing this course should:
  1. Have refined their research and presentation skills.
  2. Be able to demonstrate greater familiarity with the literature in a particular area of information systems.
  3. Be able to integrate material from past courses into a framework for discussing information systems.
  4. Have a better understanding of contemporary issues and current practices in information systems.
GRADING CRITERIA: 15% Research proposal (and presentation)
  35% Research paper
  15% Presentation of research
  10% Examination
  25% Active and constructive participation

COMPUTATION OF FINAL GRADES:

  A 90-100 C 70-79
  B 80-90 F Below 70

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".

COURSE REQUIREMENTS:

  Research Proposal: The two to four page Research Proposal will contain a clear statement of:
  a. the purpose of the research, research questions, and preliminary thesis;
  b. the boundaries of the research area;
  c. an outline of the research sub-topics;
  d. the methodology used, i.e., literature or field research;
  e. a preliminary reading list.

Notes:

1. It is suggested that participants pick research topics that they want to know more about, i.e., topics which have not been adequately covered in past courses; furthermore, research should not merely leverage experience gained in work situations.
  2. Participants are encouraged also to go outside of the literature and perform "field" research, through interview and other forms of information gathering. However, participants should be aware of the condensed format of the eight week term. There are precisely seven weeks between the first class and the last class, and field research should be planned so that it can be accomplished in the time frame allotted.
  3. In line with current practices in industry, this will be a predominantly paperless class. The final paper will be submitted in html format and will be published to the world wide web. To see samples of previously submitted papers, participants are encouraged to visit http://faculty.ed.umuc.edu/~jmeinke/inss690.
  Participants will present their research proposals to the class using appropriate audio-visual and/or handout materials. A notebook computer and projection device will be available, and participants are expected to use it. (Remember that this is a Professional Seminar, and professional quality audio-visuals and/or handouts are expected.) The class will participate along with the instructor in the evaluation and feedback of all research proposals. Student feedback will be considered part of class participation.



Research Paper: Individually, students will write a 30 to 40 page research paper that defines the problem or research area tutorially, clearly explains current technologies and issues, elaborates on the competitive usefulness of the technologies, and provides some indications of what will happen in the future. All sources are to be referenced. The use of extensive quotations is discouraged.

Students are expected to discuss their interim results with the class and accept/provide constructive criticism from/for other class members in the course of paper preparation. Providing constructive criticism will be considered part of class participation.

The research report evaluations will be based on content, presentation, and quality of expression. Papers are expected to meet or exceed accepted graduate-level English and scholarship standards.

Papers should conform to the APA documentation style with minor modifications due to the html format. For example, since the paper will paginate based on the printer settings of the individual browser, it is not appropriate to list page numbers in the table of contents. Rather, the table of contents should be in outline form, and preferably with links to the appropriate sections. A brief summary of the APA style can be found at http://www.ldl.net/~bill/aparev.htm A more complete description may be found at http://owl.english.purdue.edu/Files/30A.html. The general order of items in the research paper should be: Title page information, Abstract, outline, body of paper, Annotated Bibliography. Note again, that due to html formatting, the Title page information should not necessarily constitute a full page -- it will be that much more difficult to read from within the browser. Similarly, the abstract should not necessarily constitute a complete separate page.

Presentation of Research: Students will present their research finding and conclusions to the class using appropriate audio-visual and/or handout material. The in-class presentation should allow for 15 minutes for questions and discussion. Members of the class as well as the instructor will contribute in evaluating and providing feedback on the presentation. Evaluation and feedback are considered part of class participation.

Examination: An exam will be given during the last class meeting. It will be an essay exam covering material discussed during class as well as material from student research presentations. Students will have a choice of questions to answer, i.e., answer 3 of the following 4 questions.

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, and to participate fully and carry their weight in class discussions.

Each student, for one component of class participation, will select two current topics/issues that will be of interest to the class, and will be responsible for leading the class discussion of the topic. Participants are encouraged to supply a one page handout to help focus the discussion. This handout can be in the form of a hard copy, or can be submitted via email to the class members.

TEXTBOOK:

Primarily articles from current journals and periodicals -- other materials as appropriate.

  Business Week Harvard Business Review Communications of the ACM
  IEEE Computer The Economist Journal of Systems Management
  MIS Quarterly Scientific American Sloan Management Review
  Information Week Byte InfoWorld
  Communications Week LAN Times Network World
  Datamation CIO Computer World
  IEEE Software AT&T Technical Journal IBM Systems Journal

Some Web sites for internet research:

  www.brint.com infoweb.nrl.navy.mil/gold_key.html

(Computer Select)

  www.learn2.com www.intelligententerprise.com
  www.whatis.com www.experts-exchange.com
  www.zdfnet.com www.devx.com/default.asp
  www.cio.com www.microsoft.com/technet
  www.business2.com www.fastcompany.com
  www.inc.com www.magazine-rack.com
  hplus.harvard.edu https://portico.umuc.edu
  www.four11.com  

CLASS DISCUSSION TOPICS LIST:

For topics for class discussion, each class participant will select a discussion topic of current interest and will identify one or two and one or two papers related to the topic. The following are potential class discussion topics. Other information system topics could be selected in addition to the ones in this list:

  Wireless computing Future trends
  Intranets in organizations Technology utopia
  IT Careers/Opportunities Object-oriented everything
  Windows 2000 MP-3, etc., and copyright issues
  Software quality PKI -- Public Key Infrastructure
  Current trends in hardware Innovation uses of information systems for competitive advantage
  Entrepreneurial opportunities in information systems Productivity through information systems and technology
Note that this is not an exhaustive list of potential topics, and these are only potential topics. Participants are to choose topics that would prove of interest to the members of the group.

INSTRUCTOR: J. Meinke

Mr. Meinke earned the BA in Mathematics and the MEd in Mathematics Education from SUNY/Buffalo, the MAT in Mathematics from the University of Montana, and the MS in Computer Science from Illinois Institute of Technology. After a period with RCA Computer Systems Division, he became involved with post-secondary education, and has been involved in teaching and curriculum development in computing for more than two decades. He currently serves on the Board of Directors of the Consortium for Computing in Small Colleges and on the Steering Committees of both the Eastern Small College Computing Conference and the CCSC Southeastern Conference. In addition, he serves as a consultant to the CEEB (College Board) AP (Advanced Placement) in Computer Science program. His areas of interest include curriculum development, computer architecture and operating systems.

Email: jmeinke@faculty.ed.umuc.edu or meinkej@acm.org; Address: Heidelberger Weg 2, D-69181 Leimen/St. Ilgen. Telephone: 06221-378208 or 370-6762/7157 (DSN) at the University of Maryland, 06224-924471 (home), 0172-6275322 (mobile).

TENTATIVE COURSE SCHEDULE:

1st weekend

19-20 August

Introductions; course administration details: syllabus, grading, paper/presentation expectations; discussion of available research facilities; topic list development for future classes; writing the research paper

Presentation of research proposals and critiques of such.

Note that facilities will be available for power point presentations. Participants should be prepared that first weekend to present their research proposals

Due: Research proposal with thesis statement, preliminary outline, preliminary bibliography

2nd weekend

02-03 September

In-progress research paper review; topic discussions
3rd weekend

16-17 September

Due: Current thesis statement, detailed outline, annotated bibliography, and draft of research paper

In-progress research paper review; topic discussions

4th weekend

30 September - 01 October

Due: final research paper

Research presentations; course evaluations; examination

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