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Explore the intersection of IT and higher education with ECAR, focusing on next-generation infrastructure, organizational models, and research bulletins on emerging technologies. Learn how ECAR supports a culture of evidence and fosters innovation in the education sector.
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EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research An Update
New EDUCAUSE Initiatives for 2002 • EDUCAUSE Core Data Survey • Virtual Communities Initiative • Institute for Computer Policy and Law • Expansion of Regional Conferences • Assuming responsibility for .edu • HEBCA • EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research
Knowledge Based Organization • Uses informed intuition • Applies dialogue before deliberation • Employs insights about effective practices • Uses core competencies effectively
IT and Higher Education • Overall expenditures over $250 billion • IT expenditures $5 - $10 billion • IT increasingly important • Higher ed is ‘on the cusp’ • New IT architecture • New pedagogy • New competitive landscape • New professional skills, impact and stature
Emerging Questions • Are there ways to organize tools and programs to support a culture of evidence? • Is there an architecture? • Can we increase, activate, accelerate or better organize knowledge? • Are there ways to employ a culture of evidence to enhance decisions and to increase the diffusion of positive innovations in higher education?
Conclusions • We live in a time of uncertainty • Higher education has a key role to play • It’s about dualism not dichotomy • The pace of change will accelerate • Higher education’s shift to a culture of evidence is in everyone’s interest
Why ECAR? “ECAR should become a research organization focused on the intersection of IT and higher education.” EDUCAUSE Board of Directors
Mission • To foster better decision-making through research and analysis about the role and implications of information technology in higher education • To address several challenges facing higher education through a systematic program of research, education and outreach
Audiences • EDUCAUSE members • CIOs • Presidents • Provosts • CFOs • Librarians • Deans • Faculty leaders
Next Generation Infrastructure • Integrate multiple systems • Create a holistic interface to the institution • Improve security, authentication, authorization • Change how work is accomplished • Enable cross-marketing and mass customization Ed Lightfoot & Weldon Ihrig, University of Washington
Organizational Models for Delivering Distance Learning • Six systems/universities studied: • University of Texas Telecampus • SUNY Learning Network • Penn State • Kentucky Commonwealth Virtual University • University of Maryland University College • University System of Georgia • The following organizational models were reviewed: • Governance • Services • Funding
Other Research Bulletins • Framework for assessing costs of IT staff turnover • Impact of course management systems • Online learning communities • Supporting learners with disabilities • Implementation of IT strategic plans • Records management in a digital world
The Outlook for ASP and IT Outsourcing in Higher Education • Analyzes IT outsourcing in higher education • Issues include: • How is the IT outsourcing decision-making process organized? • What is the experience of institutions that outsource? • Case Studies • INPUT conducted research with survey of EDUCAUSE members, phone and on-site interviews • Outsourcing market forecast - maybe
Wireless Communication Trends • Survey of nearly 1,400 institutions to determine the state and rate of implementation of wireless data communications in higher education. • Response rate was 28%. (N=367) • Research conducted by IDC • Case studies and qualitative analysis
Implementation • 59% of respondents have some implementation of wireless communications N=392
Implementation • 45% of non-respondents have also deployed
Buildings with Coverage • Libraries have the highest coverage of all building types, with coverage planned by most within 24 months. N=299
Use of Wireless Networks • Undergraduates are the biggest users of wireless networks, followed closely by faculty. N=299
Devices and Wireless Networks • Mobile PCs are the leading device for accessing wireless networks, followed by desktop PCs. • PDAs and handheld devices will be added by many institutions. N=299
Wireless Technologies Supported • 802.11b/WiFi is the dominant technology today, continuing for 2 yrs, then declining significantly. • 802.11a deployment will nearly equal 802.11b in two years on campuses. N=299
Key Challenges Faced • The most universal challenges faced in implementing wireless are security and end-user support. N=299
Wireless is Meeting Expectations • Wireless communications has met or exceeded the expectations of nearly 90% or the respondents who have implemented it. N=299
Research Studies • ASP and Outsourcing (INPUT): • March 2002 • Trends in Wireless Communications in Higher Education (IDC): June 2002 • E-Learning: September 2002 • Enterprise Resource Planning Implementations: December 2002