Curriculum recommendations for graduate professional programs in information systems
Communications of the ACM
Management Information Systems: Conceptual Foundations, Structure and Development
Management Information Systems: Conceptual Foundations, Structure and Development
Assessing expert systems impact on users' jobs
Journal of Management Information Systems - Special section: Toward a theory of business process change management
The Changing Roles of the Systems Analyst
Information Resources Management Journal
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It is generally recognized that the bottle-neck to greater computer utilization is not caused by deficiencies of equipment performance but primarily by the shortage of properly trained professionals who can better define, design, develop and implement computer applications. Business organizations attempt to respond to this shortage by introducing company training programs (Guide International, 1976), (Goldstein, 1974), while educational institutions introduce courses requiring computer proficiency. A survey of schools accredited by the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business (Cougar, 1977), indicates that 94 percent of the responding institutions now require at least one computer course of undergraduates, signifying a widely recognized need for training in this area.