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| This is the home page for the IS Jobs Registry space. This site is for students enrolled in Information Systems in Organisation (6348 & 6675). The purpose of this site is to collaboratively build a IS Jobs Registry to gain some understanding of the reality of IS industry and organisations. Students will participate in this shared wikispace to collaboratively contribute to IS job titles to create the IS Jobs Registry. This work is assessable and is part of Assignment 1. Download a copy of assignment 1 If you would like to play with the features of this wikispace, please use the sandpit. |
Analyst Programmer
Business analysts
Computer auditors
Computer Scientist
Computer Forensics Officer
Change manager
Consulting & contracting
Chief Information Officer
Data Management
[Database Analyst
ICT Education
Information Architect
IP Architect
Information Analyst
Intelligence Analyst
IT Programmer
IT sales Representaive
IT Development Manager
Forensic Accountant
Java Developer
Network Support
Network Designer
Network Engineer
Operations Analyst
Project manager
Project Officer
Research Officer
System administrator
Systems accountant
Systems Engineer
Software Devlopment
Systems Architect
Solution Desginer
[Senior Solution Designer
ICT Seccurity
Security Analyst
Security Coordinator
Security Administrator
Technical Writer
User support personnel or helpdesk support
User Interface Designer
Web Related
Web designer
Web Developer
Web Administrator
Any other IS job or any other job where IS is a big component. A good start is the ACS's IT Careers Portal at https://www.acs.org.au/ictcareers/index.htm![]()
Job Name - title of the job
Brief description - short description of the job role in Information Systems discipline. You may use online sources to find a definition for this role. e.g. ACS (Australian Computer Society) website, online IT magazines (e.g. Computerworld), wikipedia etc.
Duties & responsibilities of this role - duties and responsibilities as outlined in the job advertisements you have collected. Make sure you have referenced them properly so that others can find the source. If your job duties have already been listed by others, just add your job reference. This way you can find the common duties for this job.
Job requirements - requirements set by employers in the job advertisements e.g. academic qualifications, work experience etc.
Salary - salary or range. For higher grades compare it with industry standards.
Industry/Organisation - type of industry. organisation type private, public or non-profit.
Job listings - list the job advertisement you have used & the url. Your job reference must contain the organisation name, position name, date and URL.
Other References used - list any other sources that you have used here. Follow proper referencing convention.
Differences observed - Students should find other job advertisements other than theirs from the job listings section above. They should analyse these job ads to find interesting differences between the advertisements of different organisations. Contribution in this section is voluntary. For higher grades, you must contribute in this section.
You might like to look at this wiki site to learn how to use this wikispace
http://ucspace.canberra.edu.au/display/ds/UC+Space+Overview![]()
Tutorial time Tutor
Monday 6.30 - Lubna
Tues 9.30 - Fariba
Tues 11.30 - Fariba
Tues 1.30 - Avon
Tues 17.30 - Kim
Wed 9.30 - Malcolm
Wed 2.30 - Malcolm
Wed 4.30- Sue
Thur 9.30- Vijay
Thur 11.30- Neil
Thur 2.30 - Dale
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Hi guys... great effort. However, please don't use the font styles ("format") for presentation. I will try to explain what i mean.
in many articles, the headings are erroneously marked as "heading 3", presumably because the author wanted a medium text size. now, because all the headings are marked as "heading 3", the computer is unable to automagically create a Table of contents properly, because it thinks that these are "3rd level headings". there's a good reason why they're called "heading 1", "heading 2" etc... and it's most definitely NOT because one is bigger than the other. it's because the computer can know which headings they are so that it can properly create a "table of contents". and since these articles are quite long, we most definitely need a table of contents.
although i don't recommend it, you can still change the font size/colour/whatever using the toolbar icons. however, please ensure that if a heading is level 1, then choose "heading 1" and then change the font size/colour/whatever using the other tool bar buttons.