Information Systems  CLEP

Business CLEP Information Systems CLEP

CLEP Information Systems and Computer Applications
5 course XSeries
By UPValenciaX via edX


Total course length: 18 weeks, 4 hrs/week

An introductory business information systems series, designed to help you pass the CLEP Information Systems and Computer Applications exam and introduce you to the amazing world of Information Technology.

In this 5 part course, you will learn the basic concepts of information systems and their application.

CLEP Information Systems and Computer Applications, Part 1: IT
By UPValenciaX via edX
Scheduled MOOC
Workload: 16 hours


Syllabus
  • How standard office suite tools work (word processors, spreadsheets)
  • Details of the most important office systems (e-mail, conferencing)
  • The basics of desktop operating systems, the Internet and web browsers
  • How web browsers and Internet technologies work
  • About Electronic Data Interchange and how it works
  • The meaning of ERP, CRM and SCM, and how they work

CLEP Information Systems and Computer Applications, Part 2: Hardware
By UPValenciaX via edX
Self-paced MOOC
Workload: 16 hours


Syllabus
  • Devices for processing, storage, input and output, telecommunications, and networking
  • Functions performed by computer, telecommunications, and network hardware
  • Digital representation of data for storage and processing (numeric, text, images, audio, video)
  • Concepts of local, wide-area, and enterprise network architectures
  • Concept of mainframe versus client/server architectures
  • Operating system and network operating system functions and architectures
  • Wireless computing/communication devices (cellular, satellite devices, PDA, GPS)

CLEP Information Systems and Computer Applications, Part 3: Software Development
By UPValenciaX via edX
Self-paced MOOC
Workload: 12 hours


Syllabus
  • Software development methods and tools
  • Systems development life cycle concepts
  • Project management functions and roles
  • Types of information processing methods (batch, real-time, transaction)
  • User interface design
  • Development and purpose of standards

CLEP Information Systems and Computer Applications, Part 4: Programming
By UPValenciaX via edX
Self-paced MOOC
Workload: 16 hours


Syllabus
  • The syntax and structures of programming (pseudocode)
  • The logic that drives programming
  • How object-oriented programming works
  • The most important data types and structures
  • What are the most common file types
  • How databases are managed
  • The basics of SQL, HTML and XML
  • What data warehousing and data mining are
  • Basics of Web technologies (HTML, XML)
  • Basic Web page development (analysis and design)

CLEP Information Systems and Computer Applications, Part 5: Social Implications
By UPValenciaX via edX
Scheduled MOOC
Workload: 12 hours


Syllabus
  • The economic effects of IT
  • The challenges to privacy
  • The intellectual property rights and legal issues related to information technology
  • About Open source initiatives
  • The effects of information technology on careers (ergonomics, virtual teams, telecommuting, job design)
  • The impact of technology on careers (globalization, outsourcing, insourcing)
  • About careers in information systems and information technology
  • An understanding of knowledge management
  • How Security and controls are managed in IT
  • Which business strategies are used in IT (competition, reengineering, process modeling, e-commerce, TQM)
BUS206: Management Information Systems
By Saylor.org
Open Courseware
Self-paced

Today, the management of information systems is mostly associated with databases, the Internet, and server rooms. However, "information management" has been around since before the invention of these tools. It is as old as commerce itself, as traders, bankers, and merchants have always had reason to track sales and inventory. Creditors must be aware of how much capital has been lent to borrowers and how much money has been deposited at banks. Long before humans harnessed electricity, there was a need for information systems. But currently almost all management of information systems is done electronically.

Management Information Systems (MIS) is a formal discipline within business education that bridges the gap between computer science and the well-known business disciplines of finance, marketing, and management. However, most students will only take one or two MIS courses in their undergraduate programs.

You may not know it, but you use MIS every day. If you use email, you are using MIS, as email is an information system (you just only see one end of it). If you log into a computer every morning and access or edit data in corporate systems and databases, you are using information systems. In its most general terms, information systems encompass any interactions between organized data and people. MIS can be the means by which information is transmitted (such as the Internet), the software that displays the information (such as Microsoft Excel), or the systems that manage the data. In this course, you will learn about the various components of information systems and how to leverage them in business.

Syllabus
Top