Archives For IT

Some of the key findings from this years report include:

  • Students are drawn to hot technologies, but they rely on more traditional devices
  • Students report technology delivers major academic benefits
  • Students report uneven perceptions of institutions’ and instructors’ use of technology
  • Facebook generation students juggle personal and academic interactions
  • Students prefer, and say they learn more in, classes with online components

Regardless of whether or not one believes that technology enhances learning our students believe that it does and if we (the academy) aren’t making an effort to at least utilize the most fundamental of technologies like electronic submission of assignments or the posting course content and grades on a course management system then these student have little respect for what we do. If they don’t respect us how can we expect them to learn from us.

The data is very sobering:

  • About 1 in 3 students (31%) think the instructor often requires the help of others to get technology up and running successfully.
  • More than 1 in 2 students (51%) think they know more about technology than their professors.

Fortunately, the report also offers a detailed list of recommendations that we can follow to start utilizing technology to enhance learning.

View the Report Infographic…

View the ECAR Report Site…

Jason Hiner of Tech Republic offers his take on Gartner analyst David Cleary’s predictions on the technology trends for 2012. The first 5 items on the list are all aspects of mobile computing:

  • Media tablets and beyond
  • Mobile-centric applications and interfaces
  • Contextual and social user experience
  • Internet of Things
  • App stores and marketplaces

There should be no surprise that mobile computing and all that it entails is at the top of the technology trend. We are living in a mobile world and as the technology gets better and better we will focus less on the technology and more on what it enable us to do.

While Hiner was surprised by cloud computing’s drop from number one in 2011 to tenth in 2012 I simply see this as the logical progression in a technology implementation that is successful. The cloud is necessary to make mobile computing work and as we focus more on the things we need to do with mobile technology cloud services are there to make things work but we no longer are making a bid deal over this development. Some would argue that the cloud’s drop in significance is due to the fact that there are still too many advantages to running enterprise systems like ERP and the like over a closed network. This is a fair assessment for now but if businesses wish to remain competitive in the global market they will have to embrace mobility and the cloud sooner than later.

Some of us have been using mobile technologies as early as the late eighties or early nineties so while this current emphasis on mobility may be appear to be the “flavor of the day” to skeptics, it is an overnight success that was in the making for the past 25 years. We are finally getting to the point where an average user is able to use an iPhone, Android or tablet to not only access the conveniences of life but to help them do their work.

Case in point–I am writing this post on my MacBook Air at the airport waiting for my connecting flight. I am also using my iPhone to check the status change for my flight on Tripit. When I get to my destination I will be using the Map app to help me navigate to my hotel which was booked on my iPhone.

Read the full article…

 

I have to preface this post with the statement that I haven’t read Nathan Clevenger’s book, iPad in the Enterprise: Developing and Deploying Business Applications, so I am only dealing with the content of this excerpt from his book.

Clevenger makes the argument that widespread use of iPads in the enterprise is simply part of the consumerization if IT. The consumerization of IT is simply the use of consumer technologies in the enterprise and the rapid growth can be attributed to the following:

First and foremost, the price points make mobile devices far more accessible than other computing devices. Second, the massive diversity of applications, and the ease of purchase and installation of these applications is very different from what IT departments are typically used to.

Mobile devices like the iPad are inexpensive, easy to use, and require virtually no traditional IT department support. The following two quotes really capture the essences of why this change is happening:

As perceptive CIOs seek to transform their rigid, legacy ridden infrastructures into agile, efficient, service-driven delivery mechanisms, they must adopt a pragmatic approach to managing the risks of consumer IT while embracing the benefits. Otherwise, the CIOs risk being sidelined as the ‘enemy’ by their constituencies

and

It may involve painful changes in the status quo of corporate IT, including, as Blake said, how IT groups have to “shed our arrogance” to give the underlying technology a chance to succeed.

At the heart of these two quotes, CIO and IT departments risk being sidelined as the ‘enemy’ and they need to ‘shed their arrogance’ and realize that IT no longer needs to be in control of the technology because technology has developed to the point where it simply works and doesn’t require the support is once did. When you use an iPad you don’t have to deal with installation, configuration or licensing issues because that is handled through Apple’s infrastructure and for the most part these devices just work. Other than getting your user id and password for network connectivity or connectivity to the organizations email system, one doesn’t need IT support. A user can simply use the device to do what they need or want to do.

In 2003 most IT departments rightly ignored the warnings in Nicholas Carr’s book, IT Doesn’t Matter, because back then IT was still a “mysterious dark art” that required special skills and abilities to simply get your email to work or to access documents from anywhere. Today, with devices like the iPad technology, traditional IT support is unnecessary because the technology is advanced enough to simply work.

To be fair to my colleagues in IT they do matter and they won’t be going away any time soon. They just need to realize that they must give up their control of the things that no longer need control. I know the IT professionals I currently work with are excited about the fact that working with iPads and Adroid tablets will enable them to move away from supporting basic functionality and allow them to focus on the really exciting and challenging task of moving to a fully digital work environment. I am fortunate enough to be working with a group of forward thinking IT professionals who see technologies like the iPad as catalysts that will usher in a new and exciting world of opportunities for learning and for growth.

You have to respect someone who resigns on matters of principle. I applaud CIO Sally Jackman for taking a stand on the importance of have an Academic report in Higher Education IT. I wish more CIO’s would be willing to insist on an Academic report. Universities regardless of their size or priorities are academically driven and IT should support this mission first.

The literature dealing with the position of the Chief Information Officer (CIO) in Higher Education is filled with surveys of what characteristics the CIO must have, what priorities a CIO should hold and to whom the CIO should report.  Throughout most of this literature a consistent theme emerges—we seem know what the CIO should be doing, who they should report to, and even what the CIO should look like in the future, yet we repeatedly see that the CIO are often incapable of fulfilling the goals and roles prescribed.

Wayne Brown, VP Technology at Excelsior College and the originator of the Chief Information Officer Effectiveness in Higher Education report series lists the following responsibilities for a CIO:

  • Business Partner – Organizational strategic planning and revising business processes
  • Classic IT Support Provider – Foundations of IT support and responsive department
  • Contract Oversight – Relationships with IT vendors, contract negotiation, and contract supervision
  • Informaticist and IT Strategist – Ensure security and accuracy of institutional data and alignment of IT department with the institution
  • Integrator – Integration of all internal and external systems
  • IT Educator – Evangelist for computer use and understanding; educator of employees on how IT innovations bring value to the organization (2009)

Brown points out that Classic IT Support and Contract Oversight are the two roles in which CIO’s report success while the Business Partner and IT Educator roles are viewed as least important and the area where CIOs rate themselves as least effective. Keeping the systems running, while procuring more technology seem to be the two things that CIOs are able to consistently do well. Business partner and an IT educator and innovator are not. The predominance of literature suggests that the type of focus required to provide the five nines of reliability and provide safe and secure environments are diametrically opposed to the focus that innovation in education require.

As a result of this large body of research, there are repeated demands that higher education not “attempt to use models or paradigms for higher education CIOs that do not fit (e.g. the business model)(Lineman, 2007).” There are recommendations ranging from splitting the this top IT position in two and establishing the position of Chief Technology Officer (CTO) to be responsible for maintaining the IT infrastructure while the CIO is responsible for the innovation and leadership. Other recommendations include having the CIO report to the Chief Academic Officer (Provost) or splitting the report between the academic and financial sides of the academic house. Other literature suggests the position of a Senior Academic Technology Officer.

In the article Run IT as a business: why that’s a train wreck waiting to happen, Bob Lewis fleshes out the warning and provides a very specific list of what the CIO and their IT shop should and should not do. The list includes:

… provide alternatives to internal customers, chargebacks, SLAs, and all the other baggage associated with the “standard model.”

… that IT must be integrated into the heart of the enterprise, and everyone in IT must collaborate as a peer with those in the business who need what they do.

Nobody in IT should ever say, “You’re my customer and my job is to make sure you’re satisfied,” or ask, “What do you want me to do?”

Instead, they should say, “My job is to help you and the company succeed,” followed by “Show me how you do things now,” and “Let’s figure out a better way of getting this done. (2010)”

Perhaps Debra Allison offers the most succinct summary of what the CIO position must evolve to in The Future CIO: Critical Skills and Competencies ECAR bulletin:

The position is evolving from a focus on technology leadership to a focus on institutional innovation. With these changes, the CIO cannot afford simply to respond to requests but must also proactively work to capture opportunities that drive the institutions success (Allison, 2010).

With the requisites for institutional innovation being so different then what is required for building and maintaining that IT infrastructure, is it fair to expect one individual provide such diverse leadership. If you go back in the IT Leadership or governance literature for the past 20 years you will find that many of these warning and challenges have been repeatedly voiced.

References

Allison, D., H. “The Future CIO: Critical Skills and Competencies” (Research Bulletin 15, 2010), Boulder, CO: EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research, 2010, available from http://www.educause.edu/ecar.

Brown, W. “A Study of CIO Roles and Effectiveness in Higher Education” Campus Technology Viewpoint, 2009, available from: http://campustechnology.com/articles/2009/05/13/a-study-of-cio-roles-and-effectiveness-in-higher-education.aspx.

Lewis, B. “Run IT as a business: why that’s a train wreck waiting to happen” InfoWorld, 2010, available from: http://www.infoworld.com/d/adventures-in-it/run-it-business-why-thats-train-wreck-waiting-happen-477?page=0,0&source=footer.

Lineman, J., P. “The Corporate CIO Model and the Higher Education CIO”. EDUCAUSE Quarterly. Volume 30, Number 1, 2007 available from: http://www.educause.edu/EDUCAUSE+Quarterly/EDUCAUSEQuarterlyMagazineVolum/TheCorporateCIOModelandtheHigh/157433.

Staples, M. “Making Room for Yes: It Starts at the Top” (Research Bulletin 17, 2010). Boulder, CO: EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research, 2010, available from http://www.educause.edu/ecar.

Albright, Michael J., Nworie, John. “Rethinking Academic Technology Leadership in an Era of Change” Educause Quarterly.  Volume 31, Number 4, 2008 available from: http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/EQM0814.pdf