IS1060 Introduction to information systems
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governmental organisations (NGOs) or voluntary organisations – a church
or a charity such as Oxfam or Save the Children.
On some occasions
these distinctions matter – business organisations seek profits, public
bodies do not, at least directly; NGOs may have many volunteer workers;
business and government workers are paid. However, for our purpose
the distinctions usually do not matter and we emphasise the common
characteristics of organisations as people working together and as places
where technology is applied.
As a student, you need to understand from the start of this course – and
at the start of the
BSc Information Systems and Management
if that is your degree programme – that we are concerned with more
than just computers and networks and their most direct uses. Rather,
we are studying the information systems which are found in, and are a
fundamental part of, all manner of human organisations.
It is hard to
be an organisation (a business firm, a club, a school, or even a family)
without having some information systems to store data and provide
information to people who need to use it to guide their actions. Of
course, these information systems may not use digital information and
communications technology (i.e. computers). A paper notebook or diary,
a notice board, a meeting room or a conversation can serve as a part of
an information system too. However, here we are mostly concerned with
the more formal and deliberately structured information systems found in
organisations and that draw in large part on digital technology.
Quite often what we study is the move from a more traditional information
system, for example based on paper records, to one based on digital
records. Thus we have moved in many organisations
from paper letters
and memos typed by a secretary to emails and text messages typed by the
main sender, or from paper catalogues sent out in the post to electronic
catalogues on websites or DVDs. Another good example of change to
more ICT-based information systems today is the move in healthcare all
around the world from a paper-based patient record in a physical file, to
an electronic record stored in a computer network and potentially easily
available to multiple persons and at multiple locations. It is useful to
think through this example under the headings of
what?,
why?,
how?
and ‘
so what?’. Taking just the
why question, it is interesting to think
of how many reasons there may be to make this change from paper to
digital records. Is it to deliver better care,
safer care, to help doctors and/
or patients make more informed decisions, to reorganise the way care is
given by nurses, to allow more information sharing among doctors and
nurses, or to make the giving of care cheaper? Is it a way to solve existing
and well understood problems, or is it a way to achieve something new,
radically different and better? One rather general way to answer this
question is to say that it will make healthcare more efficient (or it is hoped
it will), but what does this word ‘efficient’ really mean?
As in this case where doctors’, nurses’ and patients’ interests are involved
(just to start with), we should always see any information system as
involving, including and serving people. Sometimes as individuals or as
citizens (for example, patients), but often as members of (or
workers
within) organisations, for example, nurses, managers, clerks, doctors,
engineers or accountants.
If we want an initial working description of the subject we study here (we
call this a working description, not a definition; as you study information
systems topics and gain new knowledge and insight you may want to
change, rephrase or extend what is proposed here), it might be something
along these lines:
Chapter 1: Information systems as a topic of study
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The subject of information systems studies the uses made of ICT within
human organisations and societies. In particular, we study how ICTs are
applied to improve the way organisations operate
and to help people to
do their jobs. This is principally achieved by collecting, storing, processing
and sharing data and information.
This description suggests that the study of information systems entails at
least four slightly separate, but related objectives:
• the
digital technologies that lie at the heart of computer-based
information handling, their characteristics and capabilities
• the
people who work with, become part of, or use information
systems
• the
tasks that they wish to undertake and their specific needs or
requirements
•
the social or organisational structure within which an information
systems is established (for example, a firm, a factory or government
department, a community or society).
We could choose to take just one of these four perspectives: the
perspective of technology, the task it is applied to, the people who use it,
or the organisational or social structure that all the above elements are
embedded in.
However, so these four elements are all in relation to one another, we
usually need to consider more than one perspective, and sometimes all
four. This idea or ‘model’ of technology in organisations structured around
four core elements was proposed in the 1960s by Harold Leavitt. It is
known as ‘Leavitt’s diamond’ and suggests that it is always possible to
relate any one of these
core elements to the others, and that when or if we
change any one, it is very likely to have some consequence for the others.
Understanding a dynamic relationship can often give us a clue to provide
answers to the ‘
so what?’ questions.
People
Task
Structure
Technology
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