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Main Authors: Scime, Anthony, Andoh-Baidoo, Francis Kofi, Bush, Charles, Osatuyi, Babajide
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ858972
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author Scime, Anthony
Andoh-Baidoo, Francis Kofi
Bush, Charles
Osatuyi, Babajide
author_facet Scime, Anthony
Andoh-Baidoo, Francis Kofi
Bush, Charles
Osatuyi, Babajide
Scime, Anthony
Andoh-Baidoo, Francis Kofi
Bush, Charles
Osatuyi, Babajide
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Information Systems' Diverse Origins Coming Together Scime, Anthony Andoh-Baidoo, Francis Kofi Bush, Charles Osatuyi, Babajide Faculty Publishing Information Systems Library Science Engineering Intellectual Disciplines Bibliometrics Literature Reviews Citation Analysis Cluster Grouping Business Education Web Sites Educational Development The diversity of IS programs and research has been of interest to various professions. It has been argued that IS has developed to the extent where it does not have to rely on other reference disciplines, but should rather serve as a reference discipline for other disciplines. While IS may have developed its own discipline, its location in different academic units may influence the venue of faculty publications. The understanding of the relationships between venue of publication and location of IS programs will influence curriculum development especially at the doctoral level and inform faculty placement decisions. In this paper, the authors examine IS research that falls into the professional categories of business, engineering, education, and library science for faculty from information systems programs. They examined the research publications of the faculty from the twenty-four IS programs accredited by ABET Inc. The data shows that irrespective of the location of the IS program, over 50% of the faculty publications are in the Engineering venue. Further, the results indicate that the location of the IS program influences the publication venue. The authors also suggest that the tenure and promotion requirements also influence the venue of the publications of IS faculty. This research contributes to both professional practice and scholarly research. (Contains 8 tables.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ858972
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2009
record_format eric
spellingShingle Information Systems' Diverse Origins Coming Together
Scime, Anthony
Andoh-Baidoo, Francis Kofi
Bush, Charles
Osatuyi, Babajide
Faculty Publishing
Information Systems
Library Science
Engineering
Intellectual Disciplines
Bibliometrics
Literature Reviews
Citation Analysis
Cluster Grouping
Business Education
Web Sites
Educational Development
Information Systems' Diverse Origins Coming Together Scime, Anthony Andoh-Baidoo, Francis Kofi Bush, Charles Osatuyi, Babajide Faculty Publishing Information Systems Library Science Engineering Intellectual Disciplines Bibliometrics Literature Reviews Citation Analysis Cluster Grouping Business Education Web Sites Educational Development The diversity of IS programs and research has been of interest to various professions. It has been argued that IS has developed to the extent where it does not have to rely on other reference disciplines, but should rather serve as a reference discipline for other disciplines. While IS may have developed its own discipline, its location in different academic units may influence the venue of faculty publications. The understanding of the relationships between venue of publication and location of IS programs will influence curriculum development especially at the doctoral level and inform faculty placement decisions. In this paper, the authors examine IS research that falls into the professional categories of business, engineering, education, and library science for faculty from information systems programs. They examined the research publications of the faculty from the twenty-four IS programs accredited by ABET Inc. The data shows that irrespective of the location of the IS program, over 50% of the faculty publications are in the Engineering venue. Further, the results indicate that the location of the IS program influences the publication venue. The authors also suggest that the tenure and promotion requirements also influence the venue of the publications of IS faculty. This research contributes to both professional practice and scholarly research. (Contains 8 tables.)
title Information Systems' Diverse Origins Coming Together
topic Faculty Publishing
Information Systems
Library Science
Engineering
Intellectual Disciplines
Bibliometrics
Literature Reviews
Citation Analysis
Cluster Grouping
Business Education
Web Sites
Educational Development
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ858972