Syllabus

MGMT 607 Management Information Systems

Online 8 weeks starting January 10, 2022 and ending March 5, 2022

No breaks, no vacations -- just 7.5 weeks

Class Location: Online only

Instructor:      James Miller

Email:             jmiller@dom.edu

Office Hours: Email or call. Email is usually faster. I can and will help you with homework especailly when you email me your work in progress.

Cell phone:    847-530-0550

For best results, read this document from this location.

Text (required - pick the electronic version or one of the hard copy editions). Just the text - no MyMISLab or other software:  

Laudon & Laudon, Management Information Systems:  Managing the Digital Firm.  15 th Ed.  Pearson . This ISBN is 9780134639710. You can license an electronic copy for the duration of this course for about half the $240 price of the hard copy text book. The link to license the electronic copy directly from the publisher is https://www.vitalsource.com/textbooks?utf8=%E2%9C%93&sort=&term=0134639715

OR

Laudon & Laudon, Management Information Systems:  Managing the Digital Firm.  14 th Ed.  Pearson . Retails for about $240. (15th Edition is recommended but this should work with only a few minor probems on quizzes)

.

OR

Laudon & Laudon, Management Information Systems:  Managing the Digital Firm.  13th Ed.  Pearson. (15th Edition is recommended but this should work with only a few minor probems on quizzes)

We will also use Microsoft Office software, especially Excel, Access, SQL Server and Adobe Dreamweaver.  This software is availabe in the Dominican Tech Center. You can access the software by remotely connecting to Dominican's acats2k12 server. See this link for further information. It is usually easier and less time consuming and less frustrating to avoid installing Project, Access and/or Dreamweaver on your own machine. Please use acats2k12 for any software that you don't already have installed.

Note: Chromebook computers will not work for this course because they do not allow Microsoft Remote Desktop and may not support the Excel add-ins needed in this course.

 

Course Description: This course explores and assesses the current and future role of information technology in business, from both a management and a user perspective. Topics include: the strategic role of IT, hardware and operating systems, software development tools and processes, relational databases, big data, data warehouses, data analytics, security concerns, ethical issues, privacy issues, enterprise applications, intelligent systems, and the role and influence of IT on business processes. Hands-on experiences include, web site creation, database, data warehouse, data analytics, and spreadsheet. Case studies are also used to facilitate discussions focused on the course topics.   Case studies are also used to facilitate discussions focused on the course topics.  

Prerequisites:   

MGMT601, QUAN504

Class times – READ CAREFULLY

Online participation is required from January 11, 2021 throughMarch 6, 2021.  Please be aware that you must be available to participate in weekly online discussions.  You must contribute to each and every Discussion Thread on at least three different days each week; any time of day is acceptable. Each course week begins on Monday at 12:01 am and runs through to the following Sunday at 11:59 pm . More details by week are available at the bottom of this page.

Objectives: 

Course Format

This online course is organized into eight weeks and all course materials will be available each week on the Dominican University Canvas site (https://dominicanu.instructure.com/). Each week begins on Monday at 12:01 am and runs until the following Sunday at 11:59 pm (). Each week there is a posted online lecture, a required assignment, an online quiz, and one or more online discussions. In the final week, there is an online final exam and a short paper due. The paper should be completed over the span of several weeks, however. All assignments are submitted electronically via Canvas (instructions will be provided) and are due by no later than 11:59 pm on the appropriate Sunday. Each week, students will be required to complete an online quiz that will be available from Monday through Sunday of the appropriate week. In addition, students will be required to participate each week in each online discussion on a minimum of three different days during the week for full credit points. The details for each course component requirement are provided below. Please be aware that due to the nature of the course, absolutely NO LATE discussions. Sorry, NO EXCEPTIONS. Assignments and quizzes can be accepted late IF you provide advance notice to the instructor. You don't need to provide a reason - just provide advance notice.

Evaluation: (could be adjused two weeks before the class starts)

Final course average will be based on the following:

 

Course Components

Total Maximum Points

452

distributed as described:

Homework Assignments (Weeks 1 through 7)

 

On Monday of each week (except the final week) assignments will be posted on the course site.  Assignments are to be submitted electronically using Canvas (not email) by no later midnight on the scheduled Sunday due date. Exact instructions on how to accomplish this will be given. Due to the nature of the course, no late assignments will be accepted except by special arrangement BEFORE the due date. Partial credit is awarded for assignments.

 

 

 



209

Online discussion participation - Weeks 1 through 7

 

In the Online Discussion area of the course, students are required to interact with classmates to explore questions and comments related to the content of this course. Discussions will always open on Monday at 12:01 am (Chicago Time) and close on Sunday at 11:59 pm (Chicago Time). A successful student in online education is one who takes an active role in the learning process. You are therefore required to participate in the discussion areas to enhance your learning experience throughout each week.

 

Online discussions are graded each week (except the final week) based on:

1. Frequency—Number and regularity of your discussion comments, and

2. Content —Content of your contributions

 

FrequencyNumber and regularity of your contributions. Students are expected to log into the course Canvas web site and post (respond) in each of the week’s threaded discussion topics on a minimum of three separate days per week.  Note that there may be two or three discussion topics in a particular week.  You are required to post at least three times in EACH threaded topic that week (so if there are two discussion topics, that would total to a minimum of six posts for the week).

Content— points awarded to the content of your contributions. Points are awarded based on strong evidence of reading, reflection, and careful composition.  Maximum points are only awarded to posts which elaborate on previous comments with additional information contribution, or posts which present explanations of concepts or which provide clarifying examples, or posts which provide a URL and an explanation in your own words for a relevant area researched on the Internet.

 

Note: It is impossible to make up discussion points once the week ends Most weekly discussion are worth a maximum of eighteen (18) points. Again, students are required to participate in the online discussions on at least three different days of the week in each of the graded threads identified for the week.

 

 

 

 

 



84

Online Quizzes (Weeks 1 through 7)

 

On Monday of each week (except the final week) an online quiz will be posted on the course Canvas site.  Students should not take the quiz until the week's materials have been reviewed. The quizzes will be directly related to the posted weekly online lecture and textbook reading assignment for the week. Quizzes will be taken on the course Canvas site as indicated each week. Each weekly quiz will be worth a maximum of eighteen (18) points.

 

 

127

Short Paper (Weeks 5 through 7 -- due Week 8)

 

A short paper will be required where the student relates the course material to the IS/IT environment at the business where the student is presently employed or was previously employed. Details will be provided in around the sixth week of the course.

 

 

 

32

Final Exam

There will not be an Final Exam in this course

0

Summary of Evaluation Information (could be adjusted two weeks before the class starts)

Description

Number

Points

%

Homework

19

209

46%

Discussion

14

84

19%

Textbook Quizzes

14

127

28

Short Paper

1

32

7%

Final

1

0

0

452

100.0%

At the end of the course the final  letter grade will be computed as follows:

Letter Grade

Corresponding Percentage

A:

93-100%

A-:

90-92.9%

B+:

88-89.9%

B:

80-87.9%

C+:

78-79.9%

C:

70-77.9%

C-:

68-69.9%

F:

0-67.9%

Academic Integrity

You are responsible for strictly following the Brennan School of Business Academic Integrity Policy. Please link to this policy and read it. It applies to all work in this course.

Logistics:

You will need a Dominican email address. Please see the Computer Lab aides if you do not already have the required accounts. Use of Canvas is required. Go to https://dominicanu.instructure.com/ ,find this course, go to Modules and begin work on the first module. If you cannot find this course, please email me immediately at jmiller@dom.edu.

Course week-by-week Schedule

Week Chapters Comments Start End
1 1, 2 Excel Review and PMT 10-Jan 16-Jan
2 3,4 Excel Scenarios 17-Jan 23-Jan
3 5,6 Access Table Create and connect to Dominican Server 24-Jan
30-Jan
4 7,10 Guest in Discussion, Queries, e-commerce 31-Jan 6-Feb
5 8,9 Finish e-commerce, start solver, big data, and short paper 7-Feb 13-Feb
6 11,12 Finish solver, continue big data and short paper 14-Feb 20-Feb
7 13,14 Finish big data, start and finish Microsoft Project, continue Short Paper 21-Feb 27-Feb
8 None Short Paper due.  28-Feb 4-Mar
ALL WORK DUE. 4-Mar 4-Mar

Academic Calendar for Spring 2022

January 10

First Day of Classes for Spring (15 weeks) & Spring I (8 weeks)

January 14

Last day to apply to graduate in Spring 2022

 January 17

Martin Luther King, Jr. Day - No Classes

 January 18

Add/Drop deadline: Spring undergraduate courses & all Spring I courses

 January 25

Add/Drop deadline: Spring graduate courses

January 25

Last day to declare satisfactory/fail grade option for undergraduate courses

February 4
February 11

Last day to declare course intensification option for undergraduate courses
Last day to withdraw from Spring I courses (8 weeks)

March
4

Last day of Spring I courses (8 weeks)

March
7-13

Mid-semester vacation

March
14

First Day of Classes for Spring II (8 weeks)

March
21

Add/Drop deadline: all Spring II courses

March
25

Last day to withdraw from Spring classes

April
6

(G)URSCI Expo (class schedule suspended)

April
14-17
April 18

Easter Vacation
Last day to withdraw from Spring II courses (8 weeks)

April
29

Last day of undergraduate classes

April
30

Saturday and schedule conflict undergraduate final exams

May
2-5

Undergraduate Final Examinations

May
5

Last day of graduate classes

May
6

Final grades due at noon for graduating students

May
7-8

Commencement Weekend

May 7

Spring Degree Conferral

May
10

Final grades due at noon

May
28

Late Spring Degree Conferral