The Proceedings of the Information Systems Education Conference 2007: §2534    Home    Papers/Indices    prev (§2533)    Next (§2542)
Fri, Nov 2, 3:00 - 3:25, Stoops Ferry     Paper (refereed)
Recommended Citation: Saulnier, B M.  “Child is Father to the Man”: Social Software in the IS 2007 Curriculum?  In The Proceedings of the Information Systems Education Conference 2007, v 24 (Pittsburgh): §2534. ISSN: 1542-7382. (A later version appears in Information Systems Education Journal 5(37). ISSN: 1545-679X.)
 
Recipient of Best Paper Award
 
CDpic

“Child is Father to the Man”: Social Software in the IS 2007 Curriculum?

thumb
Refereed8 pages
Bruce M. Saulnier    [a1] [a2]
Department of Computer Information Systems
Quinnipiac University    [u1] [u2]
Hamden, Connecticut, USA    [c1] [c2]

A case is made for the deployment of social software and Web 2.0 tools in the IS 2007 curriculum, both as pedagogical tools and as an area of study. An examination of the enrollment problem in the information systems field is conducted. The characteristics of today’s millennial college students are examined, and it is posited that these characteristics contribute to the enrollment problem in the field. An ongoing study of the use of social software in industry is explained and preliminary results of the study are reported. Curricular implications of the study are then posited. Preliminary results of efforts to address these curricular implications are reported and future department directions are posed. It is concluded that the use of social software tools in the information systems curriculum has had a positive effect on student recruitment efforts while simultaneously addressing industry needs in a Web 2.0 business environment.

Keywords: Active Learning Pedagogy, Millennials, Social Software, Web 2.0

Read this refereed paper in Adobe Portable Document (PDF) format. (8 pages, 398 K bytes)
Preview this refereed paper in Plain Text (TXT) format. (32 K bytes)
View the PowerPoint Slides (PPT) for this presentation. (2679 K bytes)

CDpic
Comments and corrections to
webmaster@isedj.org