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An investigation into the application of appropriate information systems research methodologies of IT/IS and MBA mini-dissertations at North West University / kenneth Ohei

The dissertation provides a consideration of the significance of choosing an appropriate
post-graduate research methodology and application in higher education institutions.
Research education has become a matter of concern as there are low completion rates
of masters' students in South African universities. This study addresses the issue with
the application of appropriate IS research methodologies of IT/IS masters' and MBA
dissertations/theses at the NWU to determine whether the research approaches used in
both disciplines were relevant to their studies. The choice of an appropriate research
methodology is an arduous task with which many researchers are confronted during the
research process. The problem is that IT/IS masters' and MBA students use particular
research methodologies inappropriately but consider these to be the most appropriate
methodologies for IS research for purposes of writing their dissertations. The primary
research objective was to explore IT/IS and MBA students' ideological approach
towards comprehending information and understanding dissertation requirements by
preparing them to undertake sound research projects that culminate in masters'
dissertations and improve research completion rates. Secondarily, it attempts to
investigate the associated roles between students and supervisors, and to identify
challenges encountered, specifically with IT MBA students that will force them to use
particular research methods in their research dissertations. A quantitative research
approach was adopted and a structured framework was used as an instrument for data-gathering.
This structured framework was used randomly on all IT/IS masters' and MBA
dissertations in the NWU library. The majority of IT/IS masters' dissertations were
sourced through the Nexus Database to ensure a better return rate. The finding
gathered from the use of a structured framework for purposes of investigating IT/IS
masters' and MBA dissertations indicated that both disciplines, most especially the MBA
dissertations, lack a conceptual matrix for research alignment, supervision guidance,
and badly-structured research dissertations. There is a need for a graduate school and
IT/IS department to introduce and encourage the use of an appropriate conceptual
matrix underlying various research activities. / Thesis (M.Computer Sc & Information Systems) North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2014

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:nwu/oai:dspace.nwu.ac.za:10394/16982
Date January 2014
CreatorsOhei, Kenneth
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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