11 research outputs found

    Panel: IS 2010 – Major Changes in The Information Systems Curriculum

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    IS 2010- Curriculum Guidelines for Undergraduate Degree Programs in Information Systems has been compiled under the auspices of the Association for Computing Machinery and the Association for Information Systems. As stated in its executive summary, “This curriculum revision represents an effort to re-evaluate the core principles of the discipline through a very careful specification of the degree learning outcomes.” Indeed, the curriculum has outlined a substantial redirection of the information systems degree. It focuses much more heavily on improving organizational processes and viewing information systems in an enterprise interpretation. Technical knowledge and skills are still present but receive far less emphasis. Other topics, such as enterprise architecture, are introduced for which no current text is available. Implementing the 2010 core course curriculum could well change the learning objectives of a school’s information systems degree. The panelists will briefly describe the 2010 curriculum and compare it to the 2002 curriculum. Core classes will be evaluated using Bloom’s taxonomy for levels of knowledge. The 2010 curriculum will be evaluated for how it supports the IS major, specializations within the major, and an IS minor. The second half of the panel will be devoted to questions and answers between the panelists and the audience

    Reduced fire severity offers near-term buffer to climate-driven declines in conifer resilience across the western United States

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    Increasing fire severity and warmer, drier postfire conditions are making forests in the western United States (West) vulnerable to ecological transformation. Yet, the relative importance of and interactions between these drivers of forest change remain unresolved, particularly over upcoming decades. Here, we assess how the interactive impacts of changing climate and wildfire activity influenced conifer regeneration after 334 wildfires, using a dataset of postfire conifer regeneration from 10,230 field plots. Our findings highlight declining regeneration capacity across the West over the past four decades for the eight dominant conifer species studied. Postfire regeneration is sensitive to high-severity fire, which limits seed availability, and postfire climate, which influences seedling establishment. In the near-term, projected differences in recruitment probability between low- and high-severity fire scenarios were larger than projected climate change impacts for most species, suggesting that reductions in fire severity, and resultant impacts on seed availability, could partially offset expected climate-driven declines in postfire regeneration. Across 40 to 42% of the study area, we project postfire conifer regeneration to be likely following low-severity but not high-severity fire under future climate scenarios (2031 to 2050). However, increasingly warm, dry climate conditions are projected to eventually outweigh the influence of fire severity and seed availability. The percent of the study area considered unlikely to experience conifer regeneration, regardless of fire severity, increased from 5% in 1981 to 2000 to 26 to 31% by mid-century, highlighting a limited time window over which management actions that reduce fire severity may effectively support postfire conifer regeneration. © 2023 the Author(s)

    Quest Volume 2 Number 3

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    Contents: Save the hornbills - Global threats - and solutions that work: Power to the nation - Making power go further - Getting the most out of what we've got: Protecting transmission - New ways to track fires under power lines: Electricity from the Sun - Affordable power from sunlight: Making solar power feasible - Pioneering South African science: Election-night forecasting - Mathematical models that predict results: A termite tale of climate change - Fossil clues to the ways that savanna turned into desert: Maths and its meanings - The multifaceted world of numbers: What's up in the night sky? - Looking up into the life of stars: Fact file South Africa's energy needs: Science news- Mars rocks; Signs of life on Saturn's moon? The unpredictable curved ball - Galaxy clusters old and far - Greenland's melting glaciers - Responding to the meltdown: US evangelical Christians. Psychology - Take group exercise for health - Where are the data on avian flu?: Careers Work to supply the country's power: Viewpoint - Is evidence overrated: The S&T tourist Pilgrimages to our origins - Go back in time at the Cradle and the new Origins Centre: Your questions answered - Rainy weather: The Drumcafe's Traditional Music of South Africa:The Department of Science and Innovation: Academy of Science of South Afric
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