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Tonks, Jesse W. – AEDS J, 1970
Discusses an open-ended, generalized programing system which eliminates the duplication of effort and materials in data collection, storage, and reporting that is common in most piecemeal-evolved current management systems. (DE)
Descriptors: Computer Programs, Computer Science, Data Collection, Data Processing
Wilsey, Carl E. – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 1969
Condensed from "American School & University," Volume 41 (October 1968), 33, 52.
Descriptors: Administration, Automation, Computer Science, Computers
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rokkan, Stein – American Behavioral Scientist, 1976
Examines the expansion of data services in Western Europe after the computer revolution. Stresses that distinctive career lines and eventually a distinctive profession must be created to cope with the proliferation of data and the increase in demand for access to this data. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Computer Science, Data Collection, Databases, Information Processing
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Virunurm, Valdeko; Gaunt, Roger N. – New Directions for Institutional Research, 1977
Sophisticated computer technology now allows for increasingly adaptable privacy safeguards. Various protection mechanisms are described, including password technology and encryption techniques, and administrative guidelines are offered. (Editor/LBH)
Descriptors: Computer Science, Confidential Records, Consumer Protection, Data Collection
Prineau, J. P. – 1973
The data system and its branches, computerized in 1970, provide information from the following: student records file, accountancy file, an experimental-stage personnel file, and a planning-stage facilities file. The files not only cope with the university's daily management duties but also supply the French Ministry with statistics. Two types of…
Descriptors: Academic Records, Budgeting, College Administration, Computer Science
Schank, Roger C. – 1968
Since natural language may be assumed to have an underlying conceptual structure, it is desirable to have the machine structure its own experience, both linguistic and nonlinguistic, in a manner concomitant with the human method for doing so. This paper presents some attempts at organizing the machine's information conceptually. The different…
Descriptors: Computational Linguistics, Computer Science, Computers, Concept Formation