Office of Information Technology |
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Technology Plan 2005 (version 5/3/05)
I.
Mission Statement for Information Technologies
II.
Management of Information Technologies
III.
Overview of Information Technology Resources
IV.
Campus Strategic Priorities for Information Technology
I.
The Office of Information Technology provides innovative, contemporary, and accessible technology in microcomputing, instructional media, networking, and telephone services enabling the students, faculty and staff of IU Northwest to effectively meet the goals of a student-centered learning community. To accomplish this mission, Information Technology Services works collaboratively with the campus community to provide technology leadership and support, which emphasizes empowerment of the individual.
Our strategic technology planning will focus on investing in learning environments that help students of varied backgrounds and preparation succeed.
To accomplish this mission, the Office of Information Technology will:
IUN is committed to establishing and maintaining appropriate information
technologies, including instructional technology, in order to serve students,
faculty and staff needs. This commitment has several implications. As a
regional campus, IUN is clearly an integral part of the
The entire IU system is in the midst of a major transformation concerning the use of information technologies for learning, scholarship, discovery, creativity and service. IUN intends to provide facilities and support for an expanding role of information technologies to faculty, students, and staff who have significantly different needs and experience in the use of technology. This support includes not only technical support of hardware and software; but also what is equally important, training to serve the instructional and curricular needs of faculty and students; and to provide an up-to-date cyber infrastructure to support discovery, creative research, and scholarship
To use technology effectively in a learning environment an appropriate organizational structure must be created to manage information technology resources. This structure has been initiated in the creation of the Cabinet-level position of Vice Chancellor for Information Technology. This position reports directly to both the IUN Chancellor, Bruce Bergland and IU Vice President and CIO, Michael McRobbie. The VCIT is responsible for all aspects of information technology at IUN.
The Vice Chancellor for Information Technology is responsible for implementing and maintaining the Indiana University Information Technology Strategic Plan Architecture for the 21st Century: An Information Technology Strategic Plan for Indiana University on the IUN campus. This position represents IUN at meetings with Vice President and CIO, Michael McRobbie and works directly with centralized IT staff. The Vice Chancellor works with the Strategic Planning Team and the Technology Council to prioritize, plan, and implement specific Shared Vision outcomes as stated in the Shared Vision documents.
At IUN, The Information Technology Division consists of the following operating units: the Office of the Vice Chancellor; the Department of Microcomputer Support Services which provides desktop support and student computer support; the Department of Instructional Services which provides audio-visual services, distance learning, and faculty development; and the Department of Technical Services which provides network administration, server administration, programming services for specialized reports, and telecommunications. Other functions include microcomputer applications instruction, and web management. This structure must be complemented by a planning, staffing, and budgeting process for IT that can be integrated into the overall IUN planning and budgeting process.
The charts on following two pages show the Information Technology organization and a visual representation of the governance and constituent consultation necessary to coordinate information technology operations at IUN.
.
The Technology Council is a representative body appointed by the Chancellor for a staggered two-year term. The Technology Council is charged with developing a process and a plan that:
To achieve this charge the Technology Council shall perform the following:
a. A campus of IU, and
b. An institution known for excellence in cultural discovery and learning and sustainable regional vitality.
Non-voting members
The Student Technology Fee Committee is comprised of five students and five faculty or academic staff (from the Technology Council) charged to advise and review issues pertaining to the proper use of technology fees collected from IUN students. The committee serves in an advisory capacity to the Vice Chancellor for Information Technology. In addition, the committee's mission, as approved by the Technology Council, is to solicit, review, and select proposals for one-time funding from unallocated Student Technology fees.
The Faculty Organization Computer Committee shall review policy and practice with regard to funding, acquisition, and management of computers, computer-related equipment, and computer facilities, and make policy recommendations in these areas. The Chairperson on this committee shall be a member of the Technology Council to provide policy input concerning computers and concerning the Technology Plan of the campus.
This committee acts as a conduit between the faculty and information technology organization to advise on operating issues as they relate to the academic mission of the campus and to determine the software configuration (build) in microcomputer classrooms. Often policy issues are first discussed in this committee and then brought forward to the Technology Council for recommendation and approval by the Chancellor's Cabinet.
The Faculty Classroom Teaching and Distributive Education Committee shall provide a forum for the discussion of common and unique educational concerns in such areas and objectives as: Teaching methods and practices; test construction; evaluation; statistical data on teaching; the relationships between teaching, research, and service; and philosophies of education. It shall review policy and make recommendations relevant to classroom technology , distance education, and other technology services.
There are two Student Technology Centers (STC's) at IUN. Marram Hall 103 is
the main STC with the manager's office located there. This STC has adjacent
bathrooms, a secure entry, special equipment for our visually impaired
students, graphics PCs with scanners, multiple high capacity HP monochrome
laser printers, a color laser printer, and is open extended hours. The other
STC is located in the
Microcomputer classrooms are located in Marram Hall, Raintree Hall, Hawthorn Hall, the Library, and at the off-campus Portage Commons site. Each computer classroom has an overhead large display video/data LCD projector, which displays the video signal from the teacher's station on a pull-down screen at the front of the room, and one or more networked HP Laser printers. Funding for all computer classrooms comes entirely from Student Technology Fees.
There are a total of 50 classrooms on campus and 3 in
Raintree 102, our most advanced technology classroom has an AMX touch pad to control lights, curtains, sound, instructor access to a rack of equipment including Apple Macintosh computer, VCR, video disc, video copy stand and other equipment as needed.
Instructional Services has 17 mobile multimedia presentation systems available for use in the 50 classrooms on campus. There are 14 PC carts and 3 Apple Macintosh carts. The carts are customized before delivery. Speakers can be added as well as VCR/DVD players and/or video copy stands. There are 13 LCD data/video projectors available to be combined with the above carts as needed. We expect the demand for these mobile systems to decrease as we move toward a fixed multimedia concept.
Three rooms are equipped for academic video teleconferencing. Hawthorn Hall 338 is the smallest holding a maximum of eight people and is equipped with IP Polycom equipment including a video copy stand, VCR, fax machine, and scan converter for Mac or PC computers.
Hawthorn 318, with a seating capacity of 20, is our most sophisticated facility with three robotically controlled cameras and instructor controlled video copy stand, VCR and a networked Macintosh computer capable of running both Mac and PC operating systems (Virtual PC) and application programs. Advanced technologies including chromakey are available through video staff assistance in the adjacent control room. This DE room can connect via IP Polycom, fiber through Ameritech Advanced Video System (AAVS) as well as ISDN and other routes through IUPUI and IU Bloomington MCU's.
Hawthorn 105 has the largest capacity with 39 seats. It has two 54" monitors in the front of the room with instructor controlled networked computer, video copy stand and VCR. An adjacent control room allows our video staff to make connections via IP Polycom or AAVS and control cameras.
AVIDD (Analysis and Visualization of Instrument-Driven Data) is a
distributed computing facility with components at IU Bloomington, IUPUI, and IU
Northwest designed to process data generated by large scientific instruments.
AVIDD opens new doors for research at
There are three aspects of the AVIDD facility that are particularly forward-looking in meeting the coming needs of scientists:
Further details on the AVIDD facility can be found on the AVIDD web site.
IUN uses computers as an integral element of all administrative activities, including in the Office of Academic Affairs, The Office of Administration and Finance, and the Office of Information Technology. In Academic Affairs, computers are essential to the scheduling of instructional facilities and A/V equipment, to maintain student records including admissions information, grades, student fees and tuition, and placement data. In Administration and Finance, computers facilitate maintaining financial records, human resources records, physical plant records and work schedules. In Information Technology, computers are used to keep track of Help Desk service requests, maintain web pages, maintain an inventory of personal computers and printers, and provide microcomputer applications training.
The IU system has recently converted older mainframe-based administrative systems to a series of modules from PeopleSoft and is implementing community (open) software in stages that will take a number of years to complete.
The Center for Excellence in
Teaching and Learning was established at IUN to encourage and support
teacher scholarship through collaboration among the Office of Academic Affairs,
the Faculty Organization's Faculty Development Committee and FACET members. The
Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning, CETL, began formal operations
in the Spring of 2002. The Center is under Academic Affairs and is housed in
the
For this 2005 planning cycle, Information Technology planning will focus on two areas:
The proposed integrated planning process chart is shown next with elements of inputs A through D detailed after the chart.
IU-wide
Information Technology initiatives (A & B).
ACTION 1: The University should build life-cycle replacement funding into its planning at every level of investment in information technology (including personal, departmental, and central systems, and network hardware and software); and UITS should develop a life-cycle replacement model to use where needed in conjunction with its investments in information technology. Implementation should begin immediately, with full funding of life-cycle replacement phased in over a fixed number of years.
ACTION 2: The University should budget a standard amount per year, per FTE to support life-cycle replacement of faculty and staff desktop computers, and to cover the cost of providing local support to that desktop.
ACTION 3: The University's stock of computers should be systematically modernized so that they are all capable of supporting current releases of widely-used software, Web access, and other basic tasks of computation and communication.
ACTION 4: The University should review the market compensation levels for qualified IT professionals at each campus and in their surrounding communities, and seek to make compensation competitive with employment alternatives, within the context of overall University salary goals.
ACTION 5: The University should provide students, faculty and staff with reliable access to computing, data storage, information, and network services, on the campuses and off.
ACTION 10: The University should continue to support the efforts to educate and certify IT professionals in needed functional areas of the profession. These programs should be expanded to reach a wider University audience, especially on the IUPUI and regional campuses.
ACTION 11: The Teaching and Learning Technology Lab and the Center for Teaching & Learning should be expanded, and new services developed where needed, to offer a standard level of teaching support services for all faculty at IUB, IUPUI, and the regional campuses.
ACTION 21: Beginning immediately, all planning and renovation of classrooms and other teaching spaces should evaluate and incorporate information technology needs. The costs of information technology identified in prior planning efforts as well as future efforts, should be fully base funded to provide for acquiring and installing equipment, as well as for maintenance, repair, life-cycle replacement, and support.
ACTION 36: IU should implement as soon as possible a new Student Information System in a way that integrates identified best practices in providing services to students and is adaptable to future changes. The UITS implementation plan contains these elements:
ACTION 39: UITS should develop a consolidated information delivery environment, leveraging technologies already in use and expanding on these with newer tools. And UITS should complete implementation of an enterprise-wide data warehouse environment, currently in progress, to support university data access and information about this data. The participation of information users and all units affected is essential.
ACTION 47: The University as a whole and the campuses individually should establish base funding for the life-cycle replacement and ongoing development of telecommunications services and infrastructure.
ACTION 51: Implementation should begin for a University-wide wireless network, initially through a trial with a School.
ACTION 54: UITS, with the departments, schools and campuses, should develop a model for student technology support that provides:
ACTION 66: The University should develop clear and forceful policies to address the management and protection of information and the security of IT resources.
PeopleSoft Modules ongoing changes and improvements
IUIE 2(
Sakai Community (open) Source initiatives
Kuali (
Faculty laptop initiative