INSTRUCTOR SOLUTION MANUAL FOR EXPERIENCING MIS 5TH CANADIAN EDITION BY DAVID M KROENKE, ANDREW GEMINO, PETER TINGLING
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INSTRUCTOR SOLUTION MANUAL FOR EXPERIENCING
MIS 5TH CANADIAN EDITION BY DAVID M KROENKE,
ANDREW GEMINO, PETER TINGLING
CONTENTS
Introduction: Organizing The Course 1
Chapter 1: Information System And You 5
Chapter 2: Business Processes and Decision Making 15
Chapter 3: Productivity, Innovation and Strategy 27
Chapter 4: Hardware and Software 42
Chapter 5: Database and Content Management 52
Chapter 6: The Cloud 64
Chapter 7: Organizations and Information Systems 74
Chapter 8: Decision Making and Business Intelligence 87
Chapter 9: Social Networking, Ecommerce, and the Web 99
Chapter 10: Acquiring Information Systems through Projects 106
Chapter 11: Structure, Governance, and Ethics 117
Chapter 12: Managing Information Security and Privacy 129
INTRODUCTION
ORGANIZING THE COURSE
We have learned quickly that there are as many ways to organize the Introduction to MIS
course as there are instructors for the course. Each instructor and institution brings their
own unique perspective and approach. This variety is a testament to the richness in the
content that surrounds this course. We have tried, in this book, to support this variety in
pedagogy by developing materials that supports different ways for organizing and
delivering content.
OUR COURSE ORGANIZATION
Since we believe there is no ―best‖ way to organize this course, we offer as a starting
point the way we have organized the course at our institution. Our course covers
13 weeks with a midterm at week 7 and a final during the final exam period. We lecture
for 2 hours a week to approximately 150 students. An additional hour of student time per
week is spent in a tutorial, of less than 20 students, where students are introduced to
business applications such as MS Office Suite (including Access), MS Visio and Adobe
Dreamweaver and Fireworks. The last two one-hour tutorial sessions are used for group
project presentations where groups of students are asked to provide a 10 minute
presentation of a particular IS topic (e.g. identify theft, data mining, firewalls, IS audit).
ASSIGNMENTS, QUIZZES, AND EXAMS
Our course requirements include the following:
2 personal assignments (one before the midterm and one after the midterm)
1 group project
8 weekly quizzes
Midterm exam
Final exam
Our personal projects provide a challenge for students to apply the knowledge they have
gained in both the tutorials and the lectures. Our student assignments vary each semester,
but if you are looking for some suggestions please contact us and we will provide you
with some of the examples we have used in the past.
The weekly quizzes may be of interest to some instructors. We use WebCT to deliver the
content for our course and we make use of the assessment tool to provide weekly quizzes
from week 3 to week 12 (skipping the midterm week). The quizzes are worth 1% each.
We use the questions in the question bank to fill the quizzes. The quizzes can be
completed online by students at any time during the week, but always before the lecture.
Quiz material is focused on the lecture to be delivered that week (not on material that has
Listed on 3 July, 2024