n n n n n
n Design
10th Edition by Kendall Kenneth and Kendall Julie,
n n n n n n n
All Chapters 1 - 16
n n n n
,TABLE OF CONTENTS n n
I. Systems Analysis Fundamentals
n n n
1. Systems, Roles, and Development Methodologies
n n n n
2. Understanding and Modeling Organization Systems n n n n
3. Project Management n
II. Information Requirements Analysis
n n n
4. Information Gathering: Interactive Methods
n n n
5. Information Gathering: Unobtrusive Methods
n n n
6. Agile Modeling, Prototyping, and Scrum
n n n n
III. The Analysis Process
n n n
7. Using Data Flow Diagrams
n n n
8. Analyzing Systems Using Data Dictionaries
n n n n
9. Process Specifications and Structured Decisions
n n n n
10. Object-Oriented Systems Analysis and Design Using UML
n n n n n n
IV. The Essentials of Design
n n n n
11. Designing Effective Output n n
12. Designing Effective Input n n
13. Designing Databases n
14. Human-Computer Interaction and UX Design n n n n
V. Quality Assurance and Implementation
n n n n
15. Designing Accurate Data Entry Procedures
n n n n
16. Quality Assurance and Implementation
n n n
,Chapter 2 n
Understanding and Modeling Organizational
n n n
Systems
n
Key Points and Objectives
n n n
1. Organizations nare ncomplex nsystems ncomposed nof ninterrelated nand ninterdependent nsubsystems.
2. System nand nsubsystem nboundaries nand nenvironments nhave nan nimpact non ninformation
nsystem nanalysis nandn
design.
3. Systems nare ndescribed nas neither nopen, nwith nfree nflowing ninformation, nor nclosed nwith
nrestricted naccess nton
information.
4. A nvirtual norganization nis none nthat nhas nparts nof nthe norganization nin ndifferent nphysical
nlocations. nThey nusen
computer nnetworks nand ncommunications ntechnology nto nwork non
nprojects. nAdvantages nof na nvirtual norganization nare:
A. Reduced ncosts nof nphysical nfacilities
B. More nrapid nresponse nto ncustomer nneeds
C. Flexibility nfor nemployees nto ncare nfor nchildren nor naging nparents
5. Enterprise nsystems nor nEnterprise nResource nPlanning n(ERP) ndescribes nan nintegrated
norganizational ninformation nsystem. nThe nsoftware nhelps nthe nflow nof n information nbetween
nthe nfunctional nareas nwithin nthen
organization.
6. ERP ncan naffect nevery naspect nof nthe norganization, nsuch nas:
A. Design nof nemployees’ nwork
B. Skills nrequired nfor njob ncompetency
C. Strategic npositioning nof nthe ncompany
7. Many nissues nmust nbe novercome nfor nthe nERP ninstallation nis nto nbe ndeclared na nsuccess:
A. User nacceptance
B. Integration nwith nlegacy nsystems nand nthe nsupply nchain
C. Upgrading nfunctionality n(and ncomplexity) nof nERP nmodules
D. Reorganizing nwork nlife nof nusers nand ndecision nmakers
E. Expanded nreach nacross nseveral norganizations
F. Strategic nrepositioning nof nthe ncompany
, 8. A ncontext-level ndata nflow ndiagram nis nan nimportant ntool nfor nshowing ndata nused nand
ninformation nproduced nby nan system. nIt nprovides nan noverview nof nthe nsetting nor nenvironment
nthe nsystem nexists nwithin—which nentities nsupply nand nreceive ndata/information.
9. The ncontext-level ndata nflow ndiagram nis none nway nto nshow nscope, nor nwhat nis nto nbe nincluded
nin nthe nsystem. nThen
project nhas na nbudget nthat nhelps nto ndefine nscope.