ii ii ii ii ii
ii Design
10th Edition by Kendall Kenneth and Kendall Julie,
ii ii ii ii ii ii ii
All Chapters 1 - 16
ii ii ii ii
,TABLE OF CONTENTS ii ii
I. Systems Analysis Fundamentals
ii ii ii
1. Systems, Roles, and Development Methodologies
ii ii ii ii
2. Understanding and Modeling Organization Systems ii ii ii ii
3. Project Management ii
II. Information Requirements Analysis
ii ii ii
4. Information Gathering: Interactive Methods ii ii ii
5. Information Gathering: Unobtrusive Methods ii ii ii
6. Agile Modeling, Prototyping, and Scrum
ii ii ii ii
III. The Analysis Process
ii ii ii
7. Using Data Flow Diagrams
ii ii ii
8. Analyzing Systems Using Data Dictionaries ii ii ii ii
9. Process Specifications and Structured Decisions
ii ii ii ii
10. Object-Oriented Systems Analysis and Design Using UML ii ii ii ii ii ii
IV. The Essentials of Design
ii ii ii ii
11. Designing Effective Output ii ii
12. Designing Effective Input ii ii
13. Designing Databases ii
14. Human-Computer Interaction and UX Design ii ii ii ii
V. Quality Assurance and Implementation
ii ii ii ii
15. Designing Accurate Data Entry Procedures
ii ii ii ii
16. Quality Assurance and Implementation
ii ii ii
,Chapter 2 ii
Understanding and Modeling Organizational
ii ii ii
Systems
ii
Key Points and Objectives
ii ii ii
1. Organizations iiare iicomplex iisystems iicomposed iiof iiinterrelated iiand iiinterdependent iisubsystems.
2. System iiand iisubsystem iiboundaries iiand iienvironments iihave iian iiimpact iion iiinformation
iisystem iianalysis iiandidesign.
3. Systems iiare iidescribed iias iieither iiopen, iiwith iifree iiflowing iiinformation, iior iiclosed iiwith
iirestricted iiaccess iitoiinformation.
4. A iivirtual iiorganization iiis iione iithat iihas iiparts iiof iithe iiorganization iiin iidifferent iiphysical
iilocations. iiThey iiuseicomputer iinetworks iiand iicommunications iitechnology iito iiwork iion
iiprojects. iiAdvantages iiof iia iivirtual iiorganization iiare:
A. Reduced iicosts iiof iiphysical iifacilities
B. More iirapid iiresponse iito iicustomer iineeds
C. Flexibility iifor iiemployees iito iicare iifor iichildren iior iiaging iiparents
5. Enterprise iisystems iior iiEnterprise iiResource iiPlanning ii(ERP) iidescribes iian iiintegrated
iiorganizational iiinformation iisystem. iiThe iisoftware iihelps iithe iiflow iiof ii information iibetween
iithe iifunctional iiareas iiwithin iitheiorganization.
6. ERP iican iiaffect iievery iiaspect iiof iithe iiorganization, iisuch iias:
A. Design iiof iiemployees’ iiwork
B. Skills iirequired iifor iijob iicompetency
C. Strategic iipositioning iiof iithe iicompany
7. Many iiissues iimust iibe iiovercome iifor iithe iiERP iiinstallation iiis iito iibe iideclared iia iisuccess:
A. User iiacceptance
B. Integration iiwith iilegacy iisystems iiand iithe iisupply iichain
C. Upgrading iifunctionality ii(and iicomplexity) iiof iiERP iimodules
D. Reorganizing iiwork iilife iiof iiusers iiand iidecision iimakers
E. Expanded iireach iiacross iiseveral iiorganizations
F. Strategic iirepositioning iiof iithe iicompany
, 8. A iicontext-level iidata iiflow iidiagram iiis iian iiimportant iitool iifor iishowing iidata iiused iiand
iiinformation iiproduced iiby iiaisystem. iiIt iiprovides iian iioverview iiof iithe iisetting iior iienvironment
iithe iisystem iiexists iiwithin—which iientities iisupply iiand iireceive iidata/information.
9. The iicontext-level iidata iiflow iidiagram iiis iione iiway iito iishow iiscope, iior iiwhat iiis iito iibe iiincluded
iiin iithe iisystem. iiTheiproject iihas iia iibudget iithat iihelps iito iidefine iiscope.