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FIT5203 Community Informatics - disestablished

Chief Examiner

This field records the Chief Examiner for unit approval purposes. It does not publish, and can only be edited by Faculty Office staff

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Tom Denison

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Unit Code, Name, Abbreviation

FIT5203 Community Informatics - disestablished (28 Apr 2021, 3:43pm) [COMMUNITY INFORMATIC (03 Sep 2014, 3:05pm)]

Reasons for Introduction

Reasons for Introduction (19 Sep 2014, 4:08pm)

FIT5203 is an elective unit introduced as part of the Master of Business Information Systems, capable of being taught both at Caulfield and at the Monash Centre in Prato, Italy from Semester 2, 2015.

Reasons for Change (28 Apr 2021, 3:44pm)

June 2016: Amended workload requirements to reflect winter block teaching at Prato over a 3 week period.

16/9/2014 - Added Prato to location of offering. 19/9/2014 - Amend Workload requirements to reflect block teaching mode in Prato.

28/4/2021 - Unit disestablished at FEC 2/21 Item 6.2

Role, Relationship and Relevance of Unit (06 Aug 2015, 11:22am)

FIT5203 Community Informatics is designed as an elective unit in the MBIS. It is particularly relevant for students in the library, recordkeeping and archiving streams who wish to understand how their professional knowledge can be used to assist cultural institutions in engaging with communities or more directly in community settings. Its key objectives are to prepare students so that they will:

  • Understand the theoretical frameworks within which Community Informatics operates
  • Understand the key technologies and the ways in which they can be used within community settings
  • Understand how to design and implement participatory informatics projects with communities
  • Understand the principles and ethics underlying Community Informatics
  • Objectives

    Objectives (13 Jun 2016, 09:46am)

    On successful completion of this unit students should be able to:

    1. describe and critically evaluate the main theoretical frameworks within which Community Informatics operates
    2. explain the nature and purpose of participatory methods in Community Informatics projects
    3. critically evaluate and apply understandings of the values and ethical issues that arise in the design and implementation of Community Informatics projects
    4. design and deliver Community Informatics projects across a broad spectrum of IKM practise and systems, including community archiving, data archiving, data management, information systems and knowledge management
    5. evaluate Community Informatics projects

    Unit Content

    ASCED Discipline Group Classification (03 Sep 2014, 3:01pm)

    029900

    Synopsis (03 Sep 2014, 3:01pm)

    This unit introduces students to the field of Community Informatics and provides them with the theoretical and practical foundations required to understand, assess and implement digital and information technologies, IKM, recordkeeping and archival systems, and social media in community settings. Students will learn how to assist communities to develop information and IT policy and strategy frameworks, to build community IT and IKM capacity, and to engage with processes that determine policy development and service delivery. The unit will focus on how community informatics expertise can support communities to achieve better and more sustainable health, education and environmental outcomes, make more effective use of community and government services, and overcome physical, mental, cultural, or social disadvantage. Topics include: theoretical frameworks; community knowledge production and sharing; information access; and the use of information technologies and IKM systems in community settings; community archiving; participatory methods and working with communities; underlying values of projects, ethical approaches and ethical dilemmas; and project design and development.

    Prescribed Reading (for new units) (09 Jun 2016, 10:16am)

    Teaching Methods

    Mode (03 Sep 2014, 3:01pm)

    on-campus, off-campus, block mode

    Special teaching arrangements (19 Sep 2014, 4:10pm)

    The unit will be offered in lecture/tutorial mode and OCL mode at Caulfield campus, but will also be designed in modular fashion to enable intensive/block mode delivery, e.g. at the Monash Prato Centre.

    Assessment

    Assessment Summary (03 Sep 2014, 3:01pm)

    In-semester assessment: 100% (Individual assignments 50% / Group assignment 50%).

    It is preferred to have the assessment based on practical work rather than on an exam. As a discipline Community Informatics is based on a strong relationship with practice and evaluation of a student's knowledge and understanding must be based on being able to apply conceptual knowledge in concrete examples and to evaluate specific projects. For instance, understanding the nature of participatory research, the ethics involved of working with communities in specific situations and the consequences for project design can only be tested superficially in an examination, and is best done via closely supervised project work and detailed case studies.

    Workloads

    Credit Points (03 Sep 2014, 3:01pm)

    6

    Workload Requirements (13 Jun 2016, 11:57am)

    Minimum total expected workload equals 144 hours per semester comprising:

    Block Mode at Monash Prato Centre (3 weeks):

  • 36 hrs lectures and discussions
  • 24 hrs organised field trips and excursions
  • 84 hrs of independent study
  • Delivery at Caulfield on campus:

  • Two hours lectures, two hours laboratories per week
  • Study schedule for off-campus students:

  • Off-campus students generally do not attend lecture, tutorial and laboratory sessions, however should plan to spend equivalent time working through resources and participating in discussions
  • A minimum of 8 hours of personal study per week for completing lab/tutorial activities, assignments, private study and revision.

    Additional/Special Timetabling Requirements (19 Sep 2014, 4:34pm)

    Prato centre teaching space.

    Administrative support at Caulfield.

    Student funding application from external (e.g. gov't, Prato special scholarships) sources.

    Monash Abroad liaison.

    Prato centre liaison.

    Resource Requirements

    Software Requirements (03 Sep 2014, 3:01pm)

    Teaching Responsibility (Callista Entry) (03 Sep 2014, 3:01pm)

    FIT

    Interfaculty Involvement (03 Sep 2014, 3:01pm)

    Prerequisites

    Prerequisite Units (03 Sep 2014, 3:01pm)

    Corequisites (03 Sep 2014, 3:01pm)

    Prohibitions (03 Sep 2014, 3:01pm)

    Research Interest (03 Sep 2014, 3:01pm)

    This unit has no research component

    Proposed year of Introduction (for new units) (19 Sep 2014, 4:32pm)

    To commence November 2015

    Prato centre, Italy

    Location of Offering (16 Sep 2014, 4:45pm)

    Caulfield, Prato

    Faculty Information

    Proposer

    Tom Denison

    Approvals

    School: 13 Jun 2016 (Jeanette Niehus)
    Faculty Education Committee: 13 Jun 2016 (Jeanette Niehus)
    Faculty Board: 13 Jun 2016 (Jeanette Niehus)
    ADT:
    Faculty Manager:
    Dean's Advisory Council:
    Other:

    Version History

    03 Sep 2014 FIT Admin Data from PRO5001 copied into this unit
    03 Sep 2014 Jared Mansfield modified Abbreviation; Cloned Unit as per REQ000000715255 for Jeanette Niehus
    04 Sep 2014 Jeanette Niehus
    16 Sep 2014 Jeanette Niehus FIT5203 Chief Examiner Approval, ( proxy school approval )
    16 Sep 2014 Jeanette Niehus FEC Approval
    16 Sep 2014 Jeanette Niehus FacultyBoard Approval - Approval for admin deadline (handbook) pending claification of Assessment to GPC
    16 Sep 2014 Trudi Robinson Added Prato to location of offering.
    17 Sep 2014 Tom Denison modified Workload/ContactHours
    17 Sep 2014 Jeanette Niehus FIT5203 Chief Examiner Approval, ( proxy school approval )
    17 Sep 2014 Jeanette Niehus FEC Approval
    17 Sep 2014 Jeanette Niehus FacultyBoard Approval - Administrative correction adding workload requirements and location of offering as approved at FEC 1/09/14.
    19 Sep 2014 Tom Denison modified ReasonsForIntroduction/RIntro; modified ReasonsForIntroduction/RChange; modified Teaching/SpecialArrangements; modified Workload/ContactHours; modified Workload/ContactHours; modified Workload/SpecialRequirements; modified DateOfIntroduction; modified Workload/ContactHours; modified Workload/SpecialRequirements
    14 Nov 2014 Jeanette Niehus FIT5203 Chief Examiner Approval, ( proxy school approval )
    09 Dec 2014 Jeanette Niehus FEC Approval
    09 Dec 2014 Jeanette Niehus FacultyBoard Approval - FEC approval granted 01/12/14.
    03 May 2016 Jeanette Niehus Admin: modified Chief Examiner
    08 Jun 2016 Caitlin Slattery Amended workload requirements to reflect winter block teaching at Prato over a 3 week period.
    09 Jun 2016 Tom Denison modified UnitContent/PrescribedReading
    09 Jun 2016 Tom Denison
    13 Jun 2016 Jeanette Niehus Admin: modified Workload/ContactHours; modified UnitObjectives/Objectives; modified Workload/ContactHours - modified as per discussion with GPC chair. Numbered learning outcomes (objectives), separated items in Workload, removed reference to 'Winter semester'.
    13 Jun 2016 Jeanette Niehus FIT5203 Chief Examiner Approval, ( proxy school approval )
    13 Jun 2016 Jeanette Niehus FEC Approval
    13 Jun 2016 Jeanette Niehus FacultyBoard Approval - GPC executive approval 160610
    13 Jun 2016 Caitlin Slattery Correction of error in workload requirements.
    13 Jun 2016 Jeanette Niehus FIT5203 Chief Examiner Approval, ( proxy school approval )
    13 Jun 2016 Jeanette Niehus FEC Approval
    13 Jun 2016 Jeanette Niehus FacultyBoard Approval - GPC executive approval 10/06/16
    28 Apr 2021 Monica Fairley modified UnitName; modified ReasonsForIntroduction/RChange

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