IS 2010 is the latest in a series of model curricula for undergraduate degrees in Information Systems. It builds on the foundation formed by this earlier work, but it is a major revision of the curriculum and incorporates several significant new characteristics. IS 2010 is the third collaborative effort by ACM and AIS. Both organizations have worldwide membership, and, therefore, IS 2010 includes elements that make it more universally adaptable than its predecessors. IS 2010 is not directly linked to a degree structure in any specific environment but it provides guidance regarding the core content of the curriculum that should be present everywhere and suggestions regarding possible electives and career tracks based on those.
ENDORSING ORGANIZATIONSAfter receiving the approvals from the sponsoring organizations, the committee is pursuing endorsements from other computing organizations. Once the endorsements have been finalized, this document will be updated.
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FOREWORDThe IS 2010 report is the latest output from model curriculum work for Information Systems (IS) that began in the early 1970s. Prior to this current effort, the most recent version of the IS undergraduate model curriculum is IS 2002, published in early 2003. IS 2002 was a relatively minor update of IS '97 [Davis et al., 1997]. Both IS 2002 and IS '97 were joint efforts by ACM, AIS, and DPMA/AITP (Data Processing Management Association/Association of Information Technology Professionals). IS '97 was preceded by DPMA '90 [Longenecker and ACM Curriculum Recommendations 1983 [ACM, 1983. IS 2002 has been widely accepted and it has also been the basis for accreditation of undergraduate programs of Information Systems. This report represents the combined effort of numerous individuals and reflects the interests of thousands of faculty and practitioners. It is grounded in the expected requirements of industry, represents the views of organizations employing the graduates, and is supported by other IS-related organizations.This report is one of the undergraduate curriculum volumes that have been produced for the core computing disciplines [see the CC2005 Overview Report;Shackelford, 2005]. In addition to IS 2010, curriculum recommendations exist for computer science [CS 2008], computer engineering [CE 2004], software engineering [SE 2004], and information technology [IT 2008] (see www.acm.org/education/curricula-recommendations). All of these reports are under the control of separate committees; updates are published as they are completed.All aspects of the global computing field continue to face rapid and frequent change. As a result, university-level Information Systems curricula need frequent updating to remain effective. Since most academic units have mechanisms to maintain currency of curricula, what is the role of professional society curriculum committees? If an IS academic unit were providing graduates solely to local business and government, the input on program contents could be derived from representatives of local organizat...
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