UMUC-EUROPE GRADUATE PROGRAMS
BOWIE STATE UNIVERSITY

INSS640 Syllabus

Course Title Information Systems Analysis and Design
Term TERM 5, 2006/2007
Education Center KAISERSLAUTERN-KAP-GRAD
Faculty Member Yurek Hinz - yhinz@faculty.ed.umuc.edu

Faculty Contact Information:

e-mail: yhinz@faculty.ed.umuc.edu

Consultation:

Instructor will be available for consultation 20 minutes prior to and 30 minutes following each session. You can also e-mail me anytime.

Required Texts and Readings:

Satzinger, J., Jackson, R., and Burd, S.  (2004).  Systems Analysis and Design in a Changing World (3rd ed.).  Boston:  Course Technology. 

In addition, a case tool will be utilized.

Supplementary Readings:

The standard for papers in the graduate program is the APA style. All participants in this course and all graduate INSS, MGMT, PUAD, and ECON courses should have a copy of the style guide:


American Psychological Association. (2001). Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 5th Edition. Washington DC: Author.

All graduate students should be prepared to utilize the UMUC online library at http://www.ed.umuc.edu/library/.  The library contains a large number of full text academic journals that are free of charge and immediately available.  The library homepage also contains a number of links related to improving students' research and writing skills.

Recommended Journals:

Publications of the various professional societies (such as ACM -- the Association for Computing Machinery, the IEEE Computing Society, and the various management professional societies) are strongly recommended.  In addition, there are many trade journals (such as eWEEK) that MIS professionals should become familiar with, many of these being published both weekly and on-line.

Course Description:

3 semester hours credit.  (Formerly INSS 540.)  Prerequisites:  Undergraduate statistics and quantitative methods, and either INSS 510, INSS 520, INSS 530, INSS 620, INSS 630, or permission of the Program Director.  Provides an in-depth look at all phases of information systems development.  Requirements acquisition methodologies are reviewed and evaluated with respect to different application areas.  Logical design is reviewed and implementation issues are addressed.  Data-centered as well as process-centered approaches to system design are reviewed.  Particular design methodologies including structured design and object-oriented design are discussed.  Life cycle as well as heuristic approaches to system development are examined and discussed.  Organizational and behavioral issues with respect to information system development are examined.  An analysis and design project will be required.  Students may receive credit for only one of the following courses:  INSS 540 or INSS 610.

Course Goals:

Upon completion of the course, participants should understand and be able to describe/explain:
1. The systems development life cycle (SDLC)
2. The reasons for formal systems analysis and design
3. Ethical, organizational and behavioral issues
4. Non-traditional systems development

Course Objectives:

At the conclusion of this course the student will be able to:
1. Compare and contrast methods for systems security and controls
2. Describe the processes and phases of IS development, and the deliverables associated with each phase of the SDLC
3. Distinguish methods for requirements acquisition
4. Justify the importance of structured logical analysis
5. Explain the difference between data centered and process centered methodologies
6. Compare and contrast conventional and object-oriented design methodologies
7. Discuss the steps involved in systems prototyping and Rapid Application Development
8. Design plans for systems implementation, operations and maintenance

Grading Information:

Grades for this course will be assigned as follows:


A  92% +
B  81 – 91%
C  70 – 80%
F  Below 70%

Please note that Bowie State University does not use "D" for graduate students. The grade F is used to designate academic failure. F(n) is used to designate failure for non-completion.  Grades of Incomplete or Withdrawal are governed by UMUC-Europe policies. For further details, please refer to the UMUC-Europe Graduate Catalog, available in your local Education Center or online at http://www.ed.umuc.edu/general_info/publications/catalogs/.

Course Requirements:

Graduate school at the masters level focuses on helping students obtain the education needed for success as professionals in their chosen fields. Thus, UMUC-Europe Graduate Programs and Bowie State University share the common goals of promoting excellence in academic scholarship through thoughtful inquiry and the skillful application of knowledge and theory for the betterment of society.

In order to maximize your graduate educational experience in general and this course in particular, your course work will be graded as follows:

10% Class Participation and homework
25% Midterm Examination
25% Final Examination
30% Team Systems Design Project
10% Project Presentation

Description of Course Requirements:

Participate in classroom discussions: You are expected to come to class prepared to engage in all discussions in a professional and informed manner. Usually this requires two to three hours for every hour of a face-to-face class and approximately ten hours of preparation per week for a DE class.

Complete graduate level projects or programming assignments, write graduate level papers or case studies:  You are required to conduct professional-level research, including appropriately citing works of others and avoiding plagiarism. Resubmission of course work from previous classes (whether or not taken at UMUC, UMUC-Europe or BSU), partially or in its entirety, is not acceptable in this course and will result in an automatic failure on the assignment.



Orally/visually present prepared material: You are required to present your results in a professional manner. In a face-to-face course, this typically means an oral presentation accompanied by appropriate visual material. In a DE class, this means creating a visual/textual presentation for your instructor and classmates.



Complete one or more written examination(s): The examination process in this class will assist you in developing the writing and critical thinking skills necessary for successfully passing the comprehensive exam required of all graduate students. The examination questions used for this course will either be taken directly from past comprehensive exams or written as though to be included on a comprehensive exam.

Course Schedule:

The class will meet on the following weekends: 09/10 JUN; 23/24 JUN; 14/15 JUL; 28/29 JUL; 0900-1600 hours.

Saturday, June 09
Review of Syllabus
Clarification of goals, objectives and requirements
Chapter 1: The World of the Modern Systems Analyst
Chapter 2: Approaches to System Development

Sunday, June 10
Appendix A: Principles of Project Management
Chapter 3: The Analyst as Project Manager
Chapter 4: Beginning the Analysis: Investigating System Requirements
Select Term Project Topic

Saturday, June 23
Chapter 5: Modeling System Requirements: Events and Things
Chapter 6: The Traditional Approach to Requirements

Sunday, June 24
Chapter 8: Evaluating Alternatives. (only: Req. & Environment parts)
Mid-term Examination Review
Mid-term Examination
Chapter 9: Moving to Design

Saturday, July 14
Chapter 10: The Traditional Approach to Design
Chapter 12: Designing Databases

Sunday, July 15
Chapter 13: Designing the User Interface
Chapter 14: Designing System Interfaces, Controls, and Security

Saturday, July 28
Chapter 8: Implementation Alternatives (only: Implementation part)
Chapter 15: Making the System Operational
Project Presentations

Sunday, July 29
Chapter 16: Current Trends in System Development
Project Presentations
Review for Final Examination
Course evaluations
Final Examination

Academic Policies:

The University has a license agreement with Turnitin.com, a service that helps prevent plagiarism from internet resources. I may be using this service in this class by either requiring students to submit their papers electronically to Turnitin.com or by submitting questionable text on behalf of a student. If you or I submit part or all of your paper, it will be stored by Turnitin.com in their database throughout the term of the University's contract with Turnitin.com. If you object to this temporary storage of your paper, you must let me know no later than two weeks after the start of this class. Please Note: If you object to the storage of your paper on Turnitin.com, I may utilize other services to check your work for plagiarism

The official university policy on Plagiarism and Academic Dishonesty can be found at http://www.umuc.edu/policy/aa15025.shtml. Section I.C. states: "Faculty may determine if the resubmission of course work from previous classes (whether or not taken at UMUC), partially or in its entirety, is acceptable when assigning a grade on that piece of course work. Faculty must provide this information in their written syllabi. If the resubmission of course work is deemed to be unacceptable, a charge may not be brought under this Policy and will be handled as indicated in the written syllabi."

Please refer to Description of Course Requirements for specific information on how resubmissions will be treated in this course.

Students with disabilities should contact the appropriate support office at UMUC-Europe. 

Jan Keller, Director of Student Services

UMUC-Europe, Heidelberg

Phone:  +49-6221-378299

Email:  edstudent_svc@ed.umuc.edu

Mailing Address:  Unit 29216, APO AE 09102 OR Im Bosseldorn 30, D-69126 Heidelberg, Germany

Please refer to the UMUC-Europe Graduate Catalog for information on the following:

Academic Integrity
Course Load
Exception to Policy
Grade Appeal Process
Make-up Examinations
Nondiscrimination
Code of Civility

Hard copies of the catalog are available at your local Education Center.

Faculty Bio:

Yurek Hinz was born and spent majority of his life in Poland. He worked as a professional musician for over 25 years in Europe and the USA and received a Master of Music degree in 1989 from the Chopin Conservatory of Music, Warsaw, Poland.

In 1990, he was granted a full scholarship to study communication at Regent University, Virginia Beach, VA, were he received a Master of Arts degree in Radio Production and Directing two years later.

Yurek Hinz graduated with the Master of Science degree in Management Information Systems from Bowie State University, Bowie, MD in 2002.

He holds the following professional certifications: Information Systems Analyst Certificate, MCP, MCSA, MCSE, MCSA 2003: Security, MCSE 2003: Security, CompTIA Network+ and CompTIA Security+, COMSEC.

Mr. Hinz is an IT Specialist for the Directorate of Information Management in Schwetzingen, Germany. In 2006, he was accepted to the Northcentral Univeristy's PhD program in Management Information Systems.


Last updated by Yurek Hinz: April 19, 2007, 11:17 am
Find this syllabus linked from the schedule at: http://www.ed.umuc.edu/schedule