IS1060 Introduction to information systems
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1. Read about each topic that you study in at least two different
textbooks. For the more technical topics, make use of a good
online reference such as Wikipedia or the
Free Online Dictionary of
Computing (www.foldoc.org) to cross check your understanding. When
you consult two or more sources they will, in all probability, not say
exactly the same things. For example, it
will often be the case that
they will use different examples and even rather different technical
language and jargon. You then have to judge and combine the various
accounts, but in doing so you will become an active learner, you will
understand more and you will remember more too. Certainly, you
should never rely on just the subject guide or
your lecture notes to give
you an adequate understanding of any topic.
2. Talk about IS issues with your friends, family and fellow students.
Keep on talking. If you can’t talk about a subject then you are unlikely
to be able to write about it in an examination. Best of all is when you
can make jokes about the subject. To be able to joke about something
usually requires a good depth of understanding.
3. Take your learning out into the world. Visit
organisations and talk
to people who work with or manage information systems, both
technical professionals and users. Ask lots of questions and test your
‘book learning’ against what people in responsible jobs actually worry
about and what they actually do. Keep a scrapbook of newspaper and
magazine articles that relate to the various parts of this syllabus. Try to
find one such story each week during the course.
4. Revise carefully what you know about writing
essays and reports in
English. What is a sentence and a paragraph? What are they for? How
do you structure one? When writing, how can you ensure that you
say all the things that you want to say, and don’t repeat a single idea
endlessly? Is your handwriting legible
to other people and if not, is it
your responsibility to improve it? Take time to identify your strengths
and weaknesses as a writer and then work to emphasise the one and
address the other. Reflection and effort to improve your writing skills
will reap great benefits in the examination for this course and of course
in many other aspects of your work life from now onwards.
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