The project was to use the programming languages php, sql, and pdo to form a website for a client. It provided a way for customers to get quotes and an option to accept the offer. Employees had the ability to login and view a report and update status of orders.
Search Results for: --------
RentZen
Course Name: Integrated Application Development (MIS 3502)
Section: 1
RentZen URL: http://misdemo.temple.edu/spring103/
Sonny Shines
This project is being offered to MIS3501 students who are looking to earn additional MIS professional achievement points. This project is not extra credit. Participation in the project will not improve or reduce your grade in MIS3501. This project is optional. You don’t need to do this project if you don’t want to. The incentive for doing this project is MIS professional achievement points, and the joy of learning/applying a new skill: programming.
MIS 3502 Project
https://misdemo.temple.edu/spring303/
MIS 3502 Section 3
Request for 50 points
3502 project rentzen
misdemo.temple.edu/spring103
Chair’s Message – May 2018

As the academic year draws to a close, we have much to celebrate. I am proud of our excellent students and their big win at this year’s AIS Student Chapter Leadership Conference. A record five teams won for their entries in analytics, blockchain, and artificial intelligence. Also, congratulations to Professor Jeremy Shafer, who won AIS Chapter Adviser of the Year.
Our signature event with the Institute for Business and Information Technology (IBIT), the Eighteenth Annual Fox IT Awards, was a great success. The honorees were technology innovators and leaders John Turner of 3M, James Rhee of Ashley Stewart, and Dave Kotch of FMC Corporation.
IBIT also hosted the third annual National Cyber Analyst Challenge, with 10 teams competing for $25,000 in prizes.
I am also proud of our graduates. Read about recent grads Emily Schucker and Frank Tkachenko, who are using what they’ve learned while in the MIS program to start their careers. We also catch up with two experienced alumni – Michael Luckenbill and Joshua Sandoe – as they find themselves well prepared to take on new career challenges.
With regard to research, read about the launch of our MIS Visiting Scholars Series, which brings leading academics to Temple for a week-long residency. Also learn how Professor Jing Gong studies the impact of information technology on consumer behavior and finds the unexpected.
Temple AIS students win big in national competition
Five Temple University undergraduate teams were winners in contests judged during the Association for Information System’s Student Chapter Leadership Conference in Dallas in April.
The contests pitted Temple against schools in the U.S. and abroad, including the universities of Alabama, Georgia, Michigan and Colorado; Saudi Arabia’s Prince Sultan University and the University of Gdansk in Poland. Temple is hosting the 2019 conference.
Faculty advisor Jeremy Shafer said he knew the students were “world class” but he was overwhelmed by their performances, “We ended up sending the six teams that made it through first round to the finals, a big achievement.”
Shafer won, too, recognized with the AIS Advisor of the year award, a new honor.
“I was really stunned, humbled,” Shafer said.
Find details about the winning projects below.
The Computational Society Case Study Challenge
First Place — Cara Evans, Rebecca Jackson, Zoe Weiner
Evans ’19, Jackson ’19 and Weiner ’18 explored how new technologies — specifically smart phones, radio-frequency identification (RFID) and “smart mirrors” – can help physical stores out sell Internet options. They found many retailers invested in one technology at a time but concluded offering multiple technologies simultaneously would be better.
“To survive, the physical stores have to offer something online can’t,” Jackson said. “Together (these technologies) create great customer experiences.”
Third Place — Andrea Behler, Erin Ebling, Michelle Pangestu
Behler ’19, Ebling ’20 and Pangestu ’20 explored how technology could affect well-being.
The team concluded that new programs using virtual reality and artificial intelligence could allow athletes to train without fear of injuries and could monitor vital signs to construct tailor-made work-outs. They found that video games like Pokemon Go! encouraged people to be more active.
“You have gamers who become more athletic and athletes who turn into gamers,” Behler said. “Each are realizing true health benefits.”
NBCUniversal Analytics Challenge
First Place — Chi Pham, Ngoc (Nathan) Pham, Run Zhu
Chi Pham ’19, Ngoc Pham ’19 and Zhu ’18 focused on QVC’s existing warehouses to determine why customers complained about deliveries. Data showed that a majority were unhappy waiting more than one week for goods. They found 97 percent of products shipped from four Northeastern warehouses to customers nationwide.
“We focused on the story,” Ngoc Pham said. “The judges liked that the flow was easy to follow and there were specific recommendations that could be applied within one to three months.”
Second Place — Quyen Le, Tung Nguyen, Cong Ngo
Le ‘20, Nguyen ’20 and Ngo ’20 approached the QVC data with the question: Does delivery speed matter?
They calculated delivery times for loyal shoppers who purchased things more than once and one-time shoppers in eight different product categories. They concluded that customer retention would increase by 27 percent if the company improved delivery times. QVC could do that by changing its warehouse system.
“Our strategies optimized distribution of work to ship the right products to the right people at the right time,” Le said.
Emerging Technology Development Challenges
Third Place — Albert Semin, Christopher Sidorchuck, Graham Geiger, Mason Elliott
Blockchain technology is new and oft-challenging to comprehend. That’s one reason Semin ‘19, Sidorchuck ‘19, Geiger ‘20 and Elliott ‘20 decided to accept the challenge.
The team put together a network that, while mostly theoretical, “could absolutely work 100 percent,” said Sidorchuck said. It created a transparent supply chain that allowed decisions to be made in real time, keeping all participants in a project accountable while also maintaining privacy needs.
“Some people say (blockchain technology) is going to be as big as the Internet or close,” said Sidorchuck, “I don’t know about that, but it’s going to be pretty important in the next 10 or 20 years. “
Tech leaders Turner, Rhee, and Kotch honored at Eighteenth Annual Fox IT awards
Alumni Michael Luckenbill and Joshua Sandoe are well-prepared for new challenges
While Michael Luckenbill ‘08 and Joshua Sandoe ’16 are no longer students, they’ve never stopped learning. Luckenbill has handled business intelligence for a food service conglomerate, merged technologies for two music giants and created custom financial asset software. Sandoe has only worked for one company since graduation, but his job changes every six months, meaning he’s already worked in the company’s business technology solutions center, served as a global information security data analyst and tried his hand at project management.
It’s a lot of change, but both alumni say Temple University’s Fox School of Business prepared them for the professional challenges.
It’s been a really good experience and it speaks to the education I received at Temple because we covered so many different areas,” Sandoe said. “I’ve had business roles, more technical roles, a role as a data analyst; and I was prepared for all of it.
Luckenbill, whose graduation in the midst of the global financial crisis prompted some to advise against technology-related jobs, said taking core Management Information System classes and the accompanying lab work meant he was ready to jump into (almost) any role on day one.
I was prepared to be hands-on with the technology instead of being hands-off,” Luckenbill said. “I used everything, my project management and database course, my software architecture course…
For the last seven years, Luckenbill has worked for LiquidHub, a Wayne-based digital customer engagement firm. As a technology manager in the custom application development division, Luckenbill works with multiple clients, most recently a financial asset firm.
“Even though things are different, custom application development doesn’t change much,” he said. “It’s understanding the business model for that particular client and what they’re trying to achieve.”

After graduating in December 2016, Sandoe joined biopharmaceutical giant Pfizer as a business technology rotational associate, meaning he’ll hold four different positions in his first two years on the job.
“It’s a very unique opportunity to see a lot of different worlds and meet a lot of smart people you may not have met if you were in one role from the beginning,” Sandoe said. “A lot of people say you start to get really comfortable with a job at the six month point and that’s when you pack up and enter next role. If someone’s looking for a routine, every-day-doing-the-same-thing routine, this is not a route I’d suggest taking.”
But it’s worked for Sandoe.
“I always get very excited before I transfer to the next role,” he said. “l’ve learned so much in a year and a half. The difference between then and now, my level of competency, it’s night and day.”
Recent MIS grads Emily Schucker and Frank Tkachenko find their paths to success
Emily Schucker ’17 thought she’d major in biology when she began studying at Temple University. Frank Tkachenko ’18 planned to reinvent himself. Both found their paths thanks to the Fox School of Business.
Schucker enjoyed technology, but she couldn’t see juggling her people-focused personality with solitary technical work. Then she learned about the Management Information Systems program.
“I went out on a limb with MIS and I’m very happy I did. I figured out what I wanted to do,” said Schucker, a technical analyst for DecisivEdge, LLC, a Delaware-based business consulting and technology services company. “MIS gave me the perfect balance. I learned to coordinate different technologies and talk to clients. I could manage people and manage code.”
At Temple, Tkachenko launched a fashion-focused Instagram and blog to hone his own style and to help others. That initiative, and his academics, helped land as a social media and content analyst at Adworthy, a Langhorne-based SaaS/Digital agency.
“The side hustle got me into non-traditional marketing, carving out a niche online and putting all you can into it in terms of social media and web design and email marketing,” Tkachenko said. “My favorite MIS class looked at user interface and experiences. It taught me how to be critical of things and how to fix them. It applies to much more than just information systems. I never knew I’d be so interested in UI/UX and design thinking or that I’d use that at my new job.”
Tkachenko expects to front-end manage client accounts and assist with back-end application development.

“For some people, advertising and marketing have a little bit of a negative connotation but the right ad at the right time to the right person gives someone something they’re looking for and helps a company sell a product and it’s a win-win,” he said. “I think I’m most excited about starting and creating something of my own. I know I’ll be working for myself one day.”
Schucker’s internship at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia showed her she could mix medicine with technology. With her double major in MIS and Biology, she moved to DecisivEdge. Her first big client was a Maine-based health care company.
“When they talk about what they do, I can understand both sides of the equation because I have familiarity with both areas,” she said.
As project manager, Schucker designed the company’s web app and portal, something she did as an undergraduate.
“I used a lot of tools I learned in class: how to interact with a client, how to get what I needed out of them, how to ask different questions and then how to manage the information I was given in a professional manner,” she said. “I was also able to manage the business developers who worked on my team.”
Schucker loves combining her passions.
“I love the technology and learning new things and that it’s growing and there’s more to know at all times,” she said. “I love being able to interact with people and the challenge of sitting down with a client who has nothing to start with, just an idea, and bringing it to life, making their dream a reality.”
