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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