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Modern Systems Analysis and Design, Global Edition

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For undergraduate and graduate systems analysis and design courses. This Global Edition has been edited to include enhancements making it more relevant to students outside the United States

Modern Systems Analysis and Design uses a practical, rather than technical, approach to help students learn the methods and principles of systems development. This text covers the concepts, skills, methodologies, techniques, tools, and perspectives essential for systems analysts to successfully develop information systems.

Teaching and Learning Experience
This program will provide a better teaching and learning experience—for you and your students. It

552 pages, Paperback

First published May 1, 1996

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About the author

Jeffrey A. Hoffer

37 books3 followers

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5 stars
56 (35%)
4 stars
40 (25%)
3 stars
41 (25%)
2 stars
9 (5%)
1 star
12 (7%)
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews
Profile Image for Charlie Beals.
15 reviews5 followers
April 29, 2020
Well, it's a textbook, so not exactly a compelling read. Also quite dated in terms of technicalities, and hardly touches Agile.

Lost another star for being oddly specific about how certain things should be done and built, while remaining vague and silent on others.

That being said, it provides a very comprehensive view of traditional SDLC methods, including all the pieces needed for a project manager to know.
Profile Image for Juliana Es.
252 reviews29 followers
Want to read
July 10, 2010
My textbook for this semester (I wish it's in hardcover)
Profile Image for Mohamed Abdelwahab.
111 reviews3 followers
May 31, 2017
A more details of each point of software development process Planning, Analysis, Design, Implementation and Maintenance
Profile Image for Clay Siefken.
14 reviews
August 5, 2020
This is a reasonably balanced survey of systems topics for the IT professional. Some of the material appears dated, but IT is an area where it's hard not to be.
2 reviews
January 30, 2016
I read this book as it was the required textbook for a systems design class that I took, and I have very mixed feelings about it. On one hand, I think that it presents material in a good, progressive fashion. The material is real-world, it has three tangible example companies that provide for ample case studies in each chapter, and it is clearly illustrated and diagrammed.

I have two major qualms with the book, however, and one qualm with the material that accompanies it.

- First, the index was very disappointing. Part of my course was a 50-page systems design report, and much of the material I needed to discuss was from the textbook. Over half of the time, the term that I needed to look up (such as test case or test scenario, neither of which are esoteric terms) was not in the index. Several times, I found a word in the glossary and not the index, and in general it was difficult to figure out where material was. That wouldn't be such an issue if it weren't for point 2:

- Second, it was not intuitively organized. The organization wasn't horrible, but even after reading and studying the textbook, I still have difficulty finding things. Material was presented in a somewhat progressive format, and it wasn't very repetitive. While this is good in theory, that means that chapters 1-3 as well as 4-5 covered project planning topics. If something (such as how to draw a sequence diagram or how to calculate Return on Investment) is discussed, it will only be discussed briefly again. When the terms aren't found in the index, it makes it very difficult to find specific information.

- Last, I was very frustrated with the test bank that seemed to accompany the book. While this isn't a qualm with the book itself, and I'm not 100% positive it wasn't altered by the program, when googling unknown terms in practice tests, I was finding exact results, which means my professor wasn't the only one using those questions. The questions that were on the test were often very specific and nit-picky. This wasn't always a problem, but in several chapters, two or more terms may have had definitions that were vague or could potentially describe another term (since we were discussing different schools of thought in systems design, there were many equivalent concepts with different names). This led to some frustrating, ambiguous questions on tests and quizzes.

In short, the material presented in this book is great, but I spent far too much time frustratedly flipping through the book trying to find particular sentences to rate it higher than two stars. If you need this book for a class, you may want to try an ebook.
1 review
February 17, 2017
if u can send me by my Email----->teshome.letarik2008@gmail.com
if you have programing books pls send me
Profile Image for Carly.
89 reviews2 followers
October 14, 2015
Pretty good. I found some of the explanations to be lengthier than necessary, and it's frustrating that no answers or solutions are provided to any of the end-of-the-chapter problems, but all in all a good book.


Also, my professor required the newest version (6th edition, I think), but I purchased this version instead for way cheaper. I rented the new version from the school library and did a very extensive and close analysis of all of the chapters to see what the differences were. In general, the differences were very few. The major difference is that they changed the end-of-chapter case studies, but if your professor won't be using those for the class (and mine did not), you can easily get away with using this book over the new, unjustifiably expensive newer edition.
Profile Image for Lori Light.
45 reviews4 followers
March 13, 2016
Textbook for my CIS 625 MBA class. Although the subject manner is very boring, the textbook is one of the most organized I've ever read/studied and is very thorough in its explanations and descriptions.

Sure, it is very odd that I would actually include a textbook on my shelf but I have to say that I don't ever remember actually reading a textbook from cover to cover - I guess it deserves to be on the shelf then! LOL. fyi - got an A in the class - the hardest I have ever worked to get an A I must say!
Profile Image for زاهي رستم.
Author 14 books203 followers
October 16, 2011
This book, I would like to read it again. Every thing in our world is a part of a system, coz that we need to understand the system we want to be a part of it.. some systems are designed, and other we need to design them.
Profile Image for Justine.
338 reviews28 followers
April 22, 2014
This book was a struggle to get through. Some of the diagramming concept chapters were helpful, but a lot of the form and report design chapters, as well as their no-detail coding chapters seemed a waste of both space and time.
3 reviews
August 8, 2014
This is a great textbook and provided some material that had not been presented in prior courses. Plan reading when reading this textbook as some of the material may have to be read more than once for comprehension. This will be one that you do not want to speed read.
Profile Image for Yousef Kabbara.
6 reviews6 followers
December 25, 2011
I think this book is a really interesting and so informative once,
it has a lot of information about the resources of the systems and the strategies about constructing them.
Profile Image for Sandy.
387 reviews11 followers
December 21, 2015
It's a textbook so it's not going to knock your socks off but it covered the material well and in an understandable way.
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews

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