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Analytical methods for Information Systems Professionals

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Title: Analytical methods for Information Systems Professionals


1
  • Analytical methods for Information Systems
    Professionals
  • Week 13 Lecture 1
  • CONCLUSION

2
  • Please fill in your surveys
  • www.ug.cs.usyd.edu.au/surveys.html
  • THEY ARE AVAILABLE UNTIL THE END OF THIS WEEK
  •  

3
  • Summary of mid-course survey
  •  
  • 45 returned questionnaires
  •  
  •          Nearly unanimous comment that
    assignments are too much work for only 5 of
    course marks
  •          Most appreciate the message board and
    announcements
  •          80 enjoy/find the tutorials
    interesting/helpful
  • Majority like the guest lecturers (60)
  •          Average overall score for How well is
    the course going for you 7.5.
  •          The textbook was widely held to be
    clear and easy to understand
  •          2 respondents would like a higher
    level of content

4
  •          Joys includedinteresting course, the
    variety of lecturers, learning about action
    research, critical thinking, learning useful
    skills, survey techniques
  •          Frustrations included too many IS
    assignments overlapping, the variety of lecture
    formats,
  •          Most valuable learnings included
    research skills, working in groups, refining
    searches, time management, improving reading
    skills, critical analysis, the learning in
    tutorials, communication, guest lecturers.
  •          Suggestions included improving the
    web-site and the availability of lecture notes
    and tutorial worksheets,

5
Whats the point?
6
  • TODAY
  • What were the objectives of the course?
  • What can you expect in the exam?
  • Clarifying some significant issues
  • Research approach
  • Refining the question
  • Questions?
  • What to do in the next 3.5 weeks other than
    panicking.

7
  • What is the question?
  • Who wants to know?
  • What is your answer?
  • How do you know if it is right?

8
Use analytical methods to
  • Formulate a question precisely
  • Have dependable techniques to gather and analyse
    data to answer questions
  • Collect and analyse feedback

9
  • Needs analysis
  • Evaluation of technology
  • Design
  • Feasibility
  • Measurement of performance and alignment
    (auditing)
  • Changing

10
  • Information Systems (IS) professionals in today's
    organisations are leaders in change and
    development.
  • Your success in this field will be aided by your
    being able to apply formal methods of information
    collection and analysis to interpreting evidence
    on IS issues.

11
  • By the end of this course you should be able to
  • understand the purpose, relevance and
    effectiveness of using analytical methods in IS,
  • identify and articulate the research problem and
    its context,
  • find, understand, analyse and evaluate literature
    related to the research question,
  •  

12
  • write a research proposal,
  • collect data using both qualitative and
    quantitative investigative methods,
  • analyse and interpret that evidence,
  • present and communicate your results verbally and
    in writing.

13
  • Lectures

14
(No Transcript)
15
  • The exam is worth 50 of your final mark and you
    must pass the exam to pass the course.

16
  • WHAT CAN YOU EXPECT IN THE EXAM?
  • (that I can reasonably tell you about)

17
  • SECTION A
  • 30 marks
  • Scenario
  • Followed by 4 questions with sub-questions which
    allow you to apply your understanding of the how
    you would select, justify and apply (in detail)
    specific qualitative analytical methods to the
    problem.
  • The questions will always indicate the number of
    points you need to make to obtain the marks
    specified.

18
  • SECTION B
  • 30 marks
  • Scenario
  • Followed by 10 questions which allow you to apply
    your understanding of the research process to
    solving the problem. The emphasis in this
    scenario is more on quantitative methods.

19
  • WHAT WILL NOT BE IN THE EXAM
  • You will not be examined on finding or reading
    the literature. That has already been assessed
    through your assignments
  • You will not be examined on the content of the
    guest lectures who presented case studies,
    Gartner and David Nathan.

20
  • CLARIFYING ISSUES NO1
  • Research Approaches

21
The Research Process
Theories
Generalisations
Hypotheses
Observations
22
  • Four elements of
  • research
  • Epistemology
  • Theoretical perspective
  • Methodology
  • Methods

Objectivist meaning and reality exist apart
from anybody being conscious of them
Constructivist meaning derives from our
interaction with the world Subjectivist meaning
is imposed on an object by the subject
What do we recognise as knowledge How do we know
what we know? What is true
  • Positivist
  • Interpretive
  • Critical

The philosphical stance that underlies our chosen
methodology our assumptions
Plan of action, research design and why
  • Techniques
  • Surveys
  • Interviews
  • observation

23
  • Four Elements of the Research Process
  • What methods do we propose to use?
  • What methodology governs our choice and use of
    methods?
  • What theoretical perspective lies behind the
    methodology in question?
  • What epistemology informs this theoretical
    perspective?

24
  • Methods
  • Research methods are the techniques or procedures
    we plan to use in our research
  • Research methods are used to gather and analyse
    data
  • When talking about research methods we talk at a
    very detailed level
  • The choice of methods is central to the progress
    and success of our research project and depend
    on
  • Purpose of the research
  • Location of the research
  • Position of the researcher
  • Cost (, time etc.)

25
  • Methodology
  • The research methodology describes our strategy
    or plan of action
  • This is the research design shaping our choice
    of methods and linking that choice to the
    research outcomes
  • Gives a rationale for our choice of methods and
    the way we employ those methods

26
  • Theoretical Perspective
  • The assumptions we bring to our chosen
    methodology. The philosophical stance that we are
    taking in our research
  • By articulating our theoretical perspective we
    present our view of the human world and ground
    our assumptions i.e. our way of looking at the
    world and making sense of it. Examples
  • Positivist
  • Critical
  • Interpretivist

27
  • Our theoretical perspective (way of looking at
    the world) involves knowledge and embodies a
    particular understanding of how we know what we
    know.
  • Epistemology is concerned with providing a
    philosophical grounding for deciding what kinds
    of knowledge are possible and how we can ensure
    that they are both adequate and legitimate
    (Maynard 1994, p10)
  • e.g.
  • Objectivism
  • Constructionism (the epistemological stance of
    many qualitative researchers)

28
  • The four elements inform one another
  • Epistemology
  • Theoretical perspective
  • Methodology
  • Methods

29
  • CLARIFYING ISSUES NO2
  • Refining the question
  • Student requirements?
  • Computer resources?
  • Access?

30
  • What to do in the next 3.5 weeks instead of
    panicking
  • Print out the course schedule and stick it on
    your wall. It is the roadmap for what you need to
    understand.
  • Revise using the lecture notes, the textbook and
    the lecture handouts including the McCrotty
    article, the list of types of research and the
    table of research approaches. Revising the other
    articles will also extend your repetoire.
  • Use the message board to discuss issues with
    each other and to ask me questions. I will
    monitor it all through the study period right up
    until the exam.
  • Study with a friend or a group.

31
  • GOOD LUCK
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