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Published byGabriella Barr Modified over 10 years ago
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Teaching Information Systems: Going Around the Poles? Steve Smithson London School of Economics
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Introduction Personal experience Importance of teaching information systems –No longer a new field –Subject to fads –Multi-disciplinary Research informs teaching and vice versa
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The Engineering View Technology centred Information systems as an offshoot of computer science and a cousin of software engineering A revolutionary, potentially highly pervasive technology needs to be explained and applied The technology appears to be neutral
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The Business View Management centred Information systems as a core component of MBAs The technology is an opportunity and/or threat for competitive advantage and organisational change From business strategy to organisational behaviour Need for alignment with the business
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The Social Science View Information systems are social systems –Made up of people and artefacts The two-way interaction between people and technology Social construction of technology, actor network theory, structuration etc. Fits within the social sciences –c.f. sociology, social psychology etc.
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Discussion The three views are: –Relevant and respectable –Not necessarily mutually exclusive, although they are highly divergent in their underlying philosophies Should we teach one, two or three of them? –Compulsories or options? Implications for: –Staff resources and harmony –Student acceptance and sanity
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Conclusion The three poles represent a challenge to the IS community United we stand, divided we fall? –Hello, research assessment exercise Information systems as a broad church? –Why should there be just one orthodoxy? Need for awareness and tolerance, not squabbling and back-stabbing
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