The MSIM curriculum part four: Managing the edge
Information managers work in a dynamic environment. They must know how to deploy the latest technologies to maximize the competitive edge for their firms, but they must also watch the horizon for the next game changer. KnowIT’s tour of the Master of Science in Information Management (MSIM) continues this month with a look at two courses that prepare students to be managers who leverage change.
Information managers work in a dynamic environment. They must know how to deploy the latest technologies to maximize the competitive edge for their firms, but they must also watch the horizon for the next game changer.
KnowIT’s tour of the Master of Science in Information Management (MSIM) continues this month with a look at two courses that prepare students to be managers who leverage change. “Emerging Technologies,” taught by Professors Ajay Vinze and Bin Gu, teaches students how to track and evaluate advances in technology. “Knowledge Management and Text Analysis,” taught by Faculty Associate Theresa Edgington, leads students into a new paradigm where they learn a new way of thinking about the nature of knowledge, and how new knowledge can be generated using human input.
Emerging technologies
The problem with preparing a course on emerging technologies, Vinze says, is that by the time you teach it the technologies may have already emerged.
Vinze and Gu — one of the department’s new professors — are collaborating to create the class. By the time students reach this class, they will have had courses that exposed them to the kinds of technology now in use. But, Vinze said, “managers today must live with one eye on the present and one eye on the future — this is the one eye on the future part.”
Fully appreciating the rapid pace of technological change, Vinze and Gu chose not to focus on a specific product or service. Instead they have structured the curriculum around the major classes of emerging technologies. Within each class they will look at a representative example.
The five classes include:
- Smart mobility — how social and communication skills interface with technology and enable work mobility
- Big data — how to leverage increasingly broad and complex data, such as voice, audio, video and other non-traditional data, which presents new issues of size, scope and complexity
- Digital distribution — how this will change the nature of commerce
- Nextware — the “internet of things,” an internet much larger than the human internet, comprised of the communications between things, whether the parts of your car or your refrigerator telling the grocery store that you are out of milk
- Smart technology — agile and nano technologies — a major source of next generation developments.
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