USF St. Petersburg campus Faculty Publications
An implementation of the IT fundamentals knowledge area in an introductory IT course. Journal
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2006
ISSN
1539-3585
Abstract
The recently promulgated IT model curriculum contains IT fundamentals (ITF) as one of its knowledge areas. It is intended to give students a broad understanding of (1) the IT profession and the skills that students must develop to become successful IT professionals and (2) the academic discipline of IT and its relationship to other disciplines. The model curriculum recommends 33 lecture hours to complete the IT fundamentals knowledge. The model curriculum also recommends that the material relevant to the IT fundamentals knowledge area be offered early in the curriculum, for example in an Introduction to IT course; however, many institutions will have to include additional material in an introductory IT course. For example, the Introduction to IT course at Georgia Southern University is used to introduce students to the available second disciplines (an important part of the Georgia Southern IT curriculum aimed at providing students with in-depth knowledge of an IT application domain), some productivity tools, and SQL in addition to an introduction to the discipline of IT. For many programs there may be too much material in an introductory IT course. This paper describes how Georgia Southern University resolved this problem by describing the structure of the introductory course at Georgia Southern, its assessment methods, and the relationship between the course and the ITF knowledge area and how those aspects of the ITF knowledge area that are not covered in the introductory course are covered elsewhere in the program.
Language
en_US
Publisher
Informing Science Institute
Recommended Citation
Aasheim, C., Lee, C. K., & Reichgelt, H. (2006). An implementation of the IT fundamentals knowledge area in an introductory IT course. Journal of Information Technology Education: Research, 5(1), 373-388.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License.
Comments
Citation only. Full-text article is available through access provided by the publisher. Published in Journal of Information Technology Education: Research, 5(1), 373-388. The full-text of the article may be accessed through the link provided.