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Exploring existential interventions that enable competency development in Information Systems students

The Information Systems field is one characterised by constant debate about its central focus and lack of a defined identity. This debate has perpetuated as the field constantly changes its identity in response to rapid and often turbulent technological advances. By attempting to study humans, compu...

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Main Author: Rahimi, Saba Ryan
Other Authors: Scott, Elsje
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Information Systems 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Rahimi, Saba Ryan
author2 Scott, Elsje
author_browse Rahimi, Saba Ryan
Scott, Elsje
author_facet Scott, Elsje
Rahimi, Saba Ryan
author_sort Rahimi, Saba Ryan
collection Thesis
description The Information Systems field is one characterised by constant debate about its central focus and lack of a defined identity. This debate has perpetuated as the field constantly changes its identity in response to rapid and often turbulent technological advances. By attempting to study humans, computers and the results when humans and computers interact, the field covers a vast intellectual territory. This vastness causes inconsistent focus and different prioritisation across geographic regions, academic institutions and industry entities. In contrast to established fields, where curricula are relatively standardised, Information Systems' curriculum has traditionally been slow to respond to industry needs, generic in nature and has served as a guideline rather than an authoritative truth. This research is concerned with how the nature of the field affects Information Systems students and graduates, and seeks to investigate how learners can contend both the with vastness of the subject matter and the lack of authoritarian guidelines. The theory of existentialism is presented as a possible philosophy that can be instilled in students to help them contend with the nature of the field. Through the gathering of personal accounts from graduates and Graduate Recruitment Officers, this research assesses how students have grown in academia and moved past the challenges of adaptation to industry. In this endeavour it confirms that existential interventions are necessary tools that can be instilled in practitioners to help them contend with the unstable and ever changing nature of the field. In addition, teamwork or the first team experience is determined to be a fundamental event in identity formation. Lastly, significant specialisation change, otherwise called role movement, is identified during this time and could be the subject of further research.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:36:19.145Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher Department of Information Systems
publisherStr Department of Information Systems
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/15692 Exploring existential interventions that enable competency development in Information Systems students Rahimi, Saba Ryan Scott, Elsje Information Systems The Information Systems field is one characterised by constant debate about its central focus and lack of a defined identity. This debate has perpetuated as the field constantly changes its identity in response to rapid and often turbulent technological advances. By attempting to study humans, computers and the results when humans and computers interact, the field covers a vast intellectual territory. This vastness causes inconsistent focus and different prioritisation across geographic regions, academic institutions and industry entities. In contrast to established fields, where curricula are relatively standardised, Information Systems' curriculum has traditionally been slow to respond to industry needs, generic in nature and has served as a guideline rather than an authoritative truth. This research is concerned with how the nature of the field affects Information Systems students and graduates, and seeks to investigate how learners can contend both the with vastness of the subject matter and the lack of authoritarian guidelines. The theory of existentialism is presented as a possible philosophy that can be instilled in students to help them contend with the nature of the field. Through the gathering of personal accounts from graduates and Graduate Recruitment Officers, this research assesses how students have grown in academia and moved past the challenges of adaptation to industry. In this endeavour it confirms that existential interventions are necessary tools that can be instilled in practitioners to help them contend with the unstable and ever changing nature of the field. In addition, teamwork or the first team experience is determined to be a fundamental event in identity formation. Lastly, significant specialisation change, otherwise called role movement, is identified during this time and could be the subject of further research. 2015-12-08T11:43:40Z 2015-12-08T11:43:40Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15692 eng application/pdf Department of Information Systems Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Information Systems
Rahimi, Saba Ryan
Exploring existential interventions that enable competency development in Information Systems students
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Exploring existential interventions that enable competency development in Information Systems students
title_full Exploring existential interventions that enable competency development in Information Systems students
title_fullStr Exploring existential interventions that enable competency development in Information Systems students
title_full_unstemmed Exploring existential interventions that enable competency development in Information Systems students
title_short Exploring existential interventions that enable competency development in Information Systems students
title_sort exploring existential interventions that enable competency development in information systems students
topic Information Systems
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15692
work_keys_str_mv AT rahimisabaryan exploringexistentialinterventionsthatenablecompetencydevelopmentininformationsystemsstudents