2006
DOI: 10.17705/1cais.01701
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MSIS 2006: Model Curriculum and Guidelines for Graduate Degree Programs in Information Systems

Abstract: This article presents the MSIS 2006 Model Curriculum and Guidelines for Graduate Degree Programs in Information Systems. As with MSIS 2000 and its predecessors, the objective is to create a model for schools designing or revising an MS curriculum in Information Systems. The curriculum was designed by a joint committee of the Association for Information Systems and the Association for Computing Machinery. MSIS2006 is a major update of MSIS 2000. Features include increasing the number of required courses from 10… Show more

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Cited by 56 publications
(75 citation statements)
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“…The ACM has established a systematic program which draws on expertise from across the community and works to consolidate the learning into a coherent form manifested as formal models of various different recommended curricula [1,2,12,15,22]. Preparation for the Computing Curricula 2013 is now underway [19] which it is intended will build on previous model curricula [2,3].…”
Section: The Acm Curriculum Familymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The ACM has established a systematic program which draws on expertise from across the community and works to consolidate the learning into a coherent form manifested as formal models of various different recommended curricula [1,2,12,15,22]. Preparation for the Computing Curricula 2013 is now underway [19] which it is intended will build on previous model curricula [2,3].…”
Section: The Acm Curriculum Familymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CC2005 provided the starting point. Subsequently specific model curricula were examined (figure 3), computer engineering and software engineering models, deemed most distant from Web Science, were excluded leaving computer science [2], information technology [15]and information science [12,22]. The comparison items were course areas, topics and specific bodies of knowledge.…”
Section: Web Science In the Curriculamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Structured most often to include 'real life' immersion into the actual workplace setting, a practicum course may be in the form of cooperative education or an internship [16], an onsite, termlong fulfillment of an industrial customer's prototype project requirement for full-time students [17; 3], the preparation of an employer-specific project for part-time students [17], or as a weekend long, competition-based project, such as the Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition [18]. Where Cooper et al [5] include the use of demonstrations, field trips and PBL lab-based exercises as options to achieve an integrative experiential learning goal, Conklin [18] notes that the fact that a practicum course covers an entire term not only increases the opportunities for student/instructor interaction, but further has the potential to allow for far greater student reflection.…”
Section: Practicum Coursesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are, of course, a number of other Bodies of Knowledge and Model Curricula (Joint Task Force on Computing Curricula 2002; Gorgone et al 2006; Association for Computing Machinery and IEEE Computing Society 2008) from around the world that those designing IS curricula need to take into account when deciding what to include and what to omit.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%