UIS
Graduate and Undergraduate Catalog
Academic
Year 2004 - 2005
MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS (MIS)
Master of Science, Undergraduate
Minor
Faculty Apiwan Dejnaronk Born, Rassule Hadidi, James Hall, David
Larson, Xiaoqing Li, Amir Parssian
Associated Faculty Burks Oakley II, David O'Gorman
Adjunct Faculty Lawrence Dale, Neil Matkin
Contact: (217) 206-6067
mis@uis.edu or http://mis.uis.edu/
Department goals and objectives
The goal of the MIS program is to prepare students for challenging
positions in the application of information technology to
solving business problems.
Specific objectives of the program
are 1)
to provide students with the analytical and practical frameworks
and
methodologies necessary to analyze, design, implement,
and manage complex information systems in contemporary organizational
structures,
2) to provide knowledge of the principles necessary for
understanding
basic computer hardware and software systems to ensure
the data quality, transmission, processing, and storage necessary
to facilitate
organizational decision making and general operations,
3)
to enable students to develop competencies in applying systems
analysis and
design strategies and techniques in realistic marketplace
environments,
and 4) to provide a balance between technical and organizational
knowledge for a variety of professional organizations.
The master of science degree in management information systems
may be earned online, on campus, or through a combination
of online and on-campus courses.
Advising
New students must contact the department for initial advising
to plan a program of study that reflects their interests
and satisfies
degree requirements.
The Master's Degree
The management information systems program is designed
to provide the professional administrator/manager a
balance between technical
expertise and organizational knowledge in the application
of information technology to solving business problems.
Entrance requirements
Applicants must complete the following (or equivalent)
coursework: introductory courses in managerial and
financial accounting
(or ACC 311), one semester of production/operations
management (such
as BUS 322 Operations Management), one semester of
statistics (such as ECO 313 Statistics for Business
and Economics),
one semester
of college algebra or mathematics, and competency
in a structured high-level programming language such as
Java,
C++, Visual
Basic, COBOL, C, Fortran, etc., either through coursework,
such as
MIS 322 Structured Programming, or practical experience.
All students
applying for admission to the MIS department are
expected to submit a Graduate Management Admissions Test (GMAT)
score or
a Graduate
Record Exam (GRE) score. Students may take their
required
prerequisite courses while they are waiting to submit
either of these test
scores.
Communication skills
Entering students are required to pass a diagnostic
writing examination administered by the Center
for Teaching and
Learning. Students
with deficiencies in writing may be required to
take ENG 375 Expository Writing or ENG 474 Professional
and Technical
Writing.
Degree
requirements
MIS 502 Technical Foundations of Information Systems
4 Hrs.
MIS 513 Management Information Systems 4 Hrs.
MIS 523 Managerial Decision Support Systems or
MIS 531 Strategic Decision Support Systems 4
Hrs.
*MIS 542 Management of Database Systems or
CSC 572 Advanced Database Concepts 4 Hrs.
*MIS 552 Systems Analysis and Design 4 Hrs.
MIS 564 Telecommunications 4 Hrs.
MIS 573 Project Management 4 Hrs.
One approved non-MIS elective (see important
notes below) 4 Hrs.
One approved course in organizational behavior
(see important notes below) 4 Hrs.
MIS 583 Graduate Project and Seminar or MIS 584
MIS Capstone 4 Hrs.
**One approved MIS elective 4 Hrs.
or
MIS 585 MIS Thesis and Seminar 8 Hrs.
Total 44 Hrs.
*Students must take MIS 552 before MIS 542.
**Those who write a thesis are not required to
complete the MIS elective.
Important Notes:
Electives: MIS 571 Electronic Commerce: Business
Uses of the Internet and MIS 574 Marketing
on the Internet
may
be taken
either as MIS
electives or non-MIS electives.
Organizational Behavior: Students may take
BUS 541 Organizational Behavior, PAD 502
Organization Dynamics,
MIS 575 Technology
Management and Organizational Transformation,
or an approved alternative.
Students who have equivalent experience
in all
but MIS 583, MIS 584, or MIS 585 may substitute
an approved
elective
but
must
complete 44 hours for the degree.
Graduation requirements
1. Selection or assignment of a management
information systems faculty adviser.
2. Fulfillment of all the prerequisites
for the master's degree in MIS.
3. A minimum B average (3.00) in MIS
502, MIS 513, and MIS 523 or MIS 531.
At least 24 hours of the courses required
for the degree must be completed following
matriculation
into the
department.
Closure requirement
All MIS graduates must complete MIS 583
Graduate Project and Seminar (4 hours)
or MIS 584
MIS Capstone (4 hours)
or MIS
585 MIS Thesis
and Seminar (8 hours). The nature of
the project is contingent on the individual's
career goals
and may
or may not include
a practicum experience.
Projects may
involve,
for example, design/analysis
of an information system for an existing
organizational need; development
of one or more databases for a potential
organizational need; analysis of
managerial needs or uses
for information that
is accessible
in an existing database; or analysis,
design, security, and management
of networks. If
the project/thesis
is not completed
during these
initial four or eight hours, students
must register for one credit hour
of MIS 586
Graduate Project
and Seminar
Continuing
Enrollment/MIS 587 Thesis and Seminar Continuing
Enrollment on an audit basis each
semester the project/thesis
remains
incomplete.
UIS policy precludes students who are
not registered from using
campus
resources. If a leave of absence
is requested and approved, continuous registration
is not required.
Failure to
obtain a leave of absence
will require retroactive registration
of one credit hour per semester.
Grading
policy
MIS department majors must maintain
a minimum 3.00 grade-point average
in all
MIS degree
requirements. Two successive
semesters of probation may lead to
a one-year suspension.
One C (2.00)
in an MIS course is acceptable. An
MIS master's degree candidate may
not take any of the 44 semester hours
required for the degree on a credit/no
credit or
pass/fail basis.
A grade
of C (2.00)
is not
acceptable for a project (MIS 583),
MIS capstone (MIS 584), or a thesis
(MIS
585).
Undergraduate MIS Minor
To earn an undergraduate minor in
management information systems,
students must
complete a minimum of 14
semester hours, at least
11 hours of which must be upper-division
coursework taken at UIS. Prerequisites
include proficiency
in a spreadsheet
and/or
a database
package or completion of CSC 317
Software Packages.
Required courses
include:
ACC 311 Administrative Uses of
Accounting
(or two semesters of elementary
accounting) or
ECO 315 Economics for Administration
or
MGT 310 Managing Organizational
Behavior 3-4 Hrs.
MIS 352 Principles of Management
Information Systems 3 Hrs.
MIS 423 Decision Support Systems
4 Hrs.
MIS 424 End User Systems Development
and Implementation 4 Hrs.
Total 14-16 Hrs.
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