Practical coursework : The coursework has two elements. A design
and implementation of a small database, and design and implementation
of a spreadsheet model. No specific brands of software are required to be
used, but typical examples would be Excel for spreadsheets and Access
for databases. (A student can equally use other software, for example the
open source desktop software found in the package Open Office.)
In the coursework you are expected to demonstrate and document your
ability to analyse and design these two small applications, as well as show
your mastery of the relevant software. Coursework must be submitted in a
word processed form. These two elements of coursework count for 25 per
cent of the overall mark.
Note: Candidates taking this course are
required to submit coursework.
1.5 How to use this subject guide This subject can be thought of as comprising four interrelated components:
• practical experience in developing small systems using standard
packages and writing short reports that document this work
• the characteristics of information and communication technologies
(ICTs)
• knowledge of the established information systems concepts and models
used in the academic literature of the subject and by those who work in
the industries that support information systems
• the processes of information systems development in their full diversity.
This is the structure and sequence that this subject guide follows, but
you do have some choice as to the exact order in which you approach the
various components and study. Note also that each of the recommended
books takes a slightly different route through this material.
As a general suggestion, and depending on your particular interests
and any previous experience of or study in this area, it is probably most
appropriate to tackle the ICT and information systems concepts to start
with – and in parallel – and to leave the broad topics of information
systems development until later. Work on the project element of the course
should be systematically followed up throughout the period of study.
Certainly the experience of doing your own projects, however small they
may be, will help you to appreciate many of the issues that are found in
larger and more complex development efforts.
The practical experience aspect of the course, and the projects that are
a part of the course, are introduced in Chapter 2. This is presented early
in the guide so that you can start to think about this work from the very
beginning of your study and go on to relate it to the other components.
Of course, completing and submitting the project work may come later in
your studies, but the sooner you start thinking about this, the better your
final work will be.
We must emphasise here that the four components of the course given
above are very much interrelated and certainly should not be treated as
wholly separate. Consider this example.
The storage of some data about a person within a computer-based system
– for example, their medical records over their lifetime or the courses and
Chapter 1: Information systems as a topic of study
7
examination marks achieved as a University of London student – is an
issue that may be considered from all four perspectives.
1. From an