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Nov 26, 2024
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Courses of Study 2016-2017 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Information Science
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Faculty
W. Arms, L. Blume, C. Cardie, T. Choudhury, D. Cosley, C. Danescu-Niculescu-Mizil, N. Dell, D. Easley, S. Fussell, G. Gay, A. Ghosh, P. Ginsparg, C. Gomes, F. Guimbretiere, S. Jackson, T. Joachims, M. Jung, J. Kleinberg, L. Lee, G. Leshed, K. Levy, M. Macy, D. Mimno, S. Mohlke, M. Naaman, P. Sengers, E. Tardos, D. Williamson
Information Science, Systems, and Technology:
Offered jointly by the Department of Information Science and the School of Operations Research and Information Engineering
Contact: 110 H Gates Hall, (607) 255-9837, www.infosci.cornell.edu, or 202 Rhodes Hall, (607) 255-5088, www.orie.cornell.edu
Digital information technologies have become pervasive in science, engineering, manufacturing, business, finance, culture, law, and government, dramatically changing the way people work and live. The proliferation and significance of these new technologies demands a new focus in engineering education—one that remains rigorous and technically oriented but is simultaneously devoted to integrating engineering design, theory, and practice within the social and organizational contexts in which these complex digital information systems are employed.
The information science, systems, and technology (ISST) major studies the design and management of complex information systems. Just as structural engineers and nanofabricators use physics at radically different scales, so also there is a scale difference between the focus of the ISST major and the more traditional, look-under-the-hood majors in computer science and operations research and industrial engineering. Rather than focusing on the computing and communication technologies that underlie digital information systems, the ISST major emphasizes information systems engineering in broad application contexts, where issues at the confluence of information science, technology, and management are the primary concerns.
The ISST major has two options. The management science option educates students in methods for quantitative decision making and their application to information technology as well as the broader role that information technology plays in making these methods effective. Students in the information science option will obtain advanced training in methods for the creation, representation, organization, access, and analysis of information in digital form.
Note: Students may not double major in both CS and ISST or ORIE and ISST. Probability, Statistics, and Optimization:
Economic, Organizational, and Social Context:
Requirements for the information science option:
- Three courses from Information Systems (Area II).
- One course from Mathematical Modeling in IT (Area III).
- Three electives, all from either Human-Centered Systems (Area V) or Social Systems (Area VI).
- Two electives from any of the six areas totaling at least 6 credits (INFO 4900 may be used to fulfill one of these electives).
Requirements for the management science option:
- Four courses from Mathematical Models in Management Science (Area I).
- Three electives, one from Information Systems (Area II) and two from the union of Mathematical Modeling in IT (Area III) and Information Technology Management Solutions (Area IV).
- Two electives from any of the six areas totaling at least 6 credits (INFO 4900 may be used to fulfill one of these electives).
Area I. Mathematical Models in Management Science:
Area II. Information Systems:
Area III. Mathematical Modeling in IT:
Area IV. IT Management Solutions:
Area V. Human-Centered Systems:
Note:
*Only one of the following can be taken for IS credit: INFO 3152 , ORIE 4350 or ECON 4020 (previously offered as ECON 3680). Students who take ECON 4020 may also count its’ prerequisite, ECON 3130 toward the Social Systems primary/secondary track requirement.
INFO 4240 may count toward Area V. Human Centered Systems or Area VI. Social Systems, but not both.
In addition to completing all ISST major requirements, students will need to finish all of the necessary college-level requirements prior to graduation.
Information Science, Systems, and Technology Honors Program:
The B.S. degree with honors is granted to engineering students who satisfy the requirements given on the “Undergraduate Study and Graduation Requirements ” page as well as the following requirements.
- 3 credit hours of ISST course work at or above the 5000-level (graded courses only; no 1 or 2 credit seminars or 2 credit courses)
- 6 credit hours of INFO 4900 - Independent Reading and Research with an ISST faculty member, spread over at least two semesters, with at least A– each semester
or
3 credit hours of INFO 4900 - Independent Reading and Research with an ISST faculty member and 3 credit hours of INFO 4910 - Teaching in Information Science , both with grades of at least A–.
The ISST research is expected to result in a programming project or a written report (or both).
The 9 credits required for honors are in addition to the minimum requirements for the major.
Procedures:
Each program must be approved by the appropriate co-director of the ISST major, and any changes to the student’s program must also be approved. |
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