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Commissioning an Academic Reformation

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Title: Commissioning an Academic Reformation


1
Commissioning an Academic Reformation
  • Shift Happens!!!

William H. Graves Senior Vice President, Academic
Strategy Professor Emeritus, UNC-Chapel Hill
2
Navigating Your Interests
  • Each hot menu item at the left links to a slide
    of that title.
  • Some slides have embedded hot links to slides not
    on the menu, but the menu is always present to
    link back to any titled menu slide. So create
    your agenda.
  • For example, a sample agenda might be
  • Pressure to Reform
  • Perceived Challenge
  • Revenue / Cost Pressures
  • Performance Obligations
  • Requires IT and More
  • Culture of Performance
  • Performance Improvement
  • Performance Barriers
  • 64,000 Question

3
Pressure to Reform
Pressure to Reform
  • Jan. 2005 Performance taxonomy and pressures
    articulated in Graves SunGard Higher Education
    white paper and its abridged publication in the
    Nov./Dec. EDUCAUSE Review
  • Mar. 2005 Final Report of the National
    Commission on Accountability in Higher Education
    (SHEEO)
  • Improved accountability for better results is
    imperative, but how to improve accountability in
    higher education is not so obvious.
  • Say what?
  • Sep. 2005 Secretary of Education creates
    (national) Commission on the Future of Higher
    Education
  • What access to what programs with what outcomes
    at what price to students, their families, and
    the public coffers?
  • Sep. 2006 Final report cites the role of IT
    without elaboration.
  • To meet the challenges of the 21st century,
    higher education must change from a system
    primarily based on reputation to one based on
    performance.
  • How many make it into any top-10 prestige
    ranking?
  • The Commission is looking for 3-4 star quality
    ratings earned by measurably improving and
    accounting for performance.

4
Sourcing as Reform
Sourcing as Reform
2000s In The World Is Flat, Thomas Friedman
described eight IT-enabled forces that are
driving individual entrepreneurship and more
intimate (inter-dependent) business relationships
to flatten the world to the advantage of
customers and employees (students and faculty
members).
1990s In Unleashing the Killer App, Larry Downes
and Chunka Mui argued compellingly that the
Internet reduces the friction in externally
sourcing products and services to create more
nimble and competitive customer-first
(student-centric) business models.
1930s Economics Nobel Laureate Ronald Coase noted
that organizations were getting large and
bureaucratic due not just to economies of scale,
but also to the friction in externally sourcing
products and services. Bureaucracy was becoming
a barrier to customer intimacy (student
centricity) and nimbleness.
5
Sourcing Today
Sourcing Today
  • Eight Globalization 3.0 (post-web) IT-powered
    forces are driving innovative sourcing
    collaborations among organizations to improve
    performance and competitiveness productivity.
  • 1. Outsourcing 2. Insourcing
  • 3. Open sourcing 4. Offshoring
  • 5. Supply chaining 6. In-forming
  • 7. Work flowing 8. Steroiding IT doping
  • New external sourcing models can contribute to
    the redesign of academic and service processes
    for the purpose of measurably improving and
    accounting for learning and service outcomes,
    service flexibility, per-student cost structures,
    net tuition, and institutional nimbleness.
  • Nonprofit higher ed must proactively flatten
    its academic and administrative service models or
    risk being flattened by policy makers and
    competitors.
  • Thomas L. Friedman, The World Is Flat (New
    York Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2005, 2006)

6
Perceived Challenge
Perceived Challenge
Catch-22 Leadership Vise of Opposing
Pressures High Performance Headaches Most
institutions know that a high-performing IT
organization is necessary to competitiveness
necessary in order to meet the expectations and
needs of all constituencies and to support
improvements in financial and student service
processes. Most institutions fail to recognize
that a high-performing IT organization is not
sufficient for achieving long-term systemic,
measurable performance improvement (including
improved learning at stabilized or reduced
per-enrollment expense).
Revenue / Cost Pressures
Performance Obligations
7
Revenue / Cost Pressures
Revenue / Cost Pressures
  • Revenue sources are changing.
  • Shrinking percentage of public funding spent on
    higher ed
  • Shrinking percentage of higher ed revenues from
    public funds
  • Tuition inelasticity
  • Increasing reliance on endowments, grants,
    contracts, market-driven program revenues
  • Costs competition are increasing.
  • More larger need-based grants greater costs
  • Merit-based tuition discounting greater costs
  • Catch 22!! Responding to these pressures can
    degrade institutional performance.
  • By capping enrollments!!
  • By increasing tuition!!

8
Although most state budgets for 2006 have
improved, the long-term prognosis for state
finances is poor, according to an analysis by the
National Center for Higher Education Management
Systems (NCHEMS). The analysis projects state
spending and revenues for eight years, from 2005
to 2013, and concludes that all states face
potential budget deficits that will serve to
limit the funding of higher education.
National Center for Public Policy and Higher
Education
9
In 2005, state and local support per student was
at its 25-year low, down from the 25-year high
that occurred just four years earlier. Support
per student decreased dramatically from 2001 to
2004, when enrollment and inflation grew by 11.9
percent and 10.5 percent, but state and local
support was essentially flat. In 2005 state and
local support resumed growth, but the national
increase of 3.6 percent was exceeded by the
combination of enrollment and inflation
increases.
10
Performance Obligations
Performance Obligations
Learning Accountability
Program Accountability
Expense Accountability
Affordability of Access
Convenience of Access
Capacity for Access
11
Learning Accountability
  • Performance Obligation
  • Measure and openly report learning outcomes in
    ways that permit comparisons among peer
    institutions.
  • Performance Pressures
  • Many campuses need to improve retention and
    graduation rates.
  • Most do not measure student learning and
    benchmark the results with peer campuses, even in
    the high-enrollment courses taught in common at
    most campuses.
  • Policy makers want learning assessed via
    independent instruments, such as the Collegiate
    Learning Assessment.
  • Performance Indicators
  • Peer average rate vs. actual rate for key
    indicators such as retention, persistence, and
    graduation
  • Peer comparisons in the National Survey of
    Student Engagement, or the Community College
    Survey of Student Engagement
  • Peer benchmarking via the Collegiate Learning
    Assessment, MAPP, or other independent
    assessments of college-prep courses,
    college-level basic fluency and critical thinking
    skills, and some of the highest-enrollment
    introductory-level disciplinary professional
    courses

12
Program Accountability
  • Performance Obligation
  • Respond rapidly to economic development and
    workforce needs with appropriate degree and
    certificate programs.
  • Performance Pressures
  • Nonprofit higher education is not offering degree
    programs at the capacity required to meet local,
    state, and national needs for school teachers,
    health-care professionals, engineers, scientists,
    mathematicians, IT professionals, and other
    immediate and future workforce personnel.
  • Even public nonprofit higher education is failing
    the free-market test in which supply and demand
    tend toward equilibrium.
  • Performance Indicators
  • Percentage of annual student FTE increase
    directly attributable to programs created or
    redesigned to meet identified economic
    development or workforce needs for teachers,
    nurses, biotech workers, etc.
  • Percentage of annual increase in non-credit
    enrollments directly attributable to programs
    created or redesigned to meet identified economic
    development or workforce needs
  • Percentage of all degrees awarded that are
    directly attributable to programs created or
    redesigned to meet identified economic
    development or workforce needs

13
Expense Accountability
  • Performance Obligation
  • Reduce or stabilize per-student operating costs
    (to increase institutional productivity).
  • Performance Pressures
  • Per-student operating expenses have been
    increasing for years at an unsustainable average
    annual rate in the 4-5 range.
  • While productivity has risen for years in almost
    all sectors of the economy, higher educations
    productivity has decreased.
  • Performance Indicators
  • Per-enrollment direct instructional expenses
  • Average ratio of enrollments to instructional
    personnel FTEs for college-prep and college-level
    basic fluency courses and some of the
    highest-enrollment introductory courses
  • Percentage of change in the annual ratio of
    student FTEs to instructional personnel FTEs
  • Percentage of change in the annual ratio of
    student FTEs to administrative FTEs
  • Per-student-FTE central IT expense and IT
    personnel (full-time part-time) expense
  • Similar unit expenses metrics in other lines of
    service

14
Affordability of Access
  • Performance Obligation
  • Reduce or stabilize inflationary increases in
    net tuition to keep college affordable to all
    qualified students.
  • Performance Issues
  • The average annual increase in net tuition has
    exceeded the Consumer Price Index for years,
    making it difficult for students in lower and
    middle income brackets to afford college.
  • Higher education tends to focus on revenues, not
    costs and, so, focuses on replacing public
    revenue shortfalls rather than increasing
    productivity in order to hold down per-student
    costs and, thus, net tuition increases.
  • Performance Indicators
  • Ratio of the annual rate of change in
    undergraduate tuition/fees to the annual Consumer
    Price Index
  • Ratio of per-student-FTE revenues from net
    tuition/fees to per-student-FTE direct
    operational expenses

15
Convenience of Access
  • Performance Obligation
  • Offer students more convenient, flexible options
    for completing a degree or certificate.
  • Performance Pressures
  • A growing number of flex students cant or
    wont participate in program and service
    offerings unless they maximize asynchronous
    online self-service instruction and services,
    while also providing real-time access to faculty
    and staff as needed..
  • Convenience is the primary reason that students,
    even residential students, expect flex programs
    and services.
  • Program accountability obligations often dictate
    flex programs and services.
  • Performance Indicators
  • Percentage of all degree programs which can be
    delivered asynchronously except for required
    clinical or lab work
  • Percentage of all non-credit programs which can
    be delivered asynchronously except for required
    clinical or lab work
  • Annual inventory of services accessible
    asynchronously via a web portal

16
Capacity for Access
  • Performance Obligation
  • Manage enrollment capacity in response to
    demand.
  • Performance Issues
  • Bottleneck courses
  • Bottleneck programs
  • Faculty capacity
  • Classroom capacity
  • There are more students in the national pipeline
    today than ever before.
  • With more flex students than ever entering the
    pipeline, enrollment pressures will continue,
    especially at public institutions in the larger
    metropolitan statistical areas.
  • Performance Indicators
  • Percentage of qualified applicants refused
    admission or admitted with delay
  • Annual percentage change in total credit hours
    and in total non-credit enrollments
  • Total first-term enrollments (credit
    non-credit)
  • Ratio of total first-term credit hours to total
    first-term instructional personnel FTEs and of
    total first-term non-credit enrollments to total
    first-term instructional personnel FTEs
  • Ratio of total annual enrollments to total
    seating capacity of the classroom plant

17
Defensive Response
Defensive Response
Risk political capital good will
Politically Incorrect
Worst-Case Bind
Compromise theaffordability of access
Compromise the capacity for access
18
Proactive Response
Proactive Response
  • Strategy of Simultaneity

Improve accountability performance
Performance Sweet Spot
Strategy ofSimultaneity
Decrease credit-hour expense increase capacity
Increase flexibility, capacity, responsiveness
19
Requires IT and More
Requires IT and More
  • IT has been necessary to increase productivity in
    the national economy especially in the recent
    economic downturn.
  • Introducing technology alone is never enough.
    The big spurts in productivity come when a new
    technology is combined with new ways of doing
    business. Friedman in The World Is Flat
  • So, IT is not sufficient to increase academic
    productivity.
  • To redesign or not to redesign services that is
    the question.

Bolted on Technology
Bolted on Expenses
IT-RedesignedServiceProcesses
ImprovedInstitutionalPerformance
20
Redesign Strategies
Redesign Strategies
  • Flex Program Strategy
  • Redesign selected programs services to
  • Reduce requirement for real-time interactions
    between students the faculty/staff.
  • More asynchronous (time-shifted) instruction
    online self-service
  • Less synchronous (real-time) instruction
    services
  • Less contact-hour instruction scheduled
    services
  • More as-needed expert help services
  • Increase options for getting expert help,
    scheduling courses, completing a degree.
  • Increase classroom office capacity of the
    existing plant.
  • Reduce dependency on the semester model.
  • Common Course Strategy
  • Redesign common courses to
  • Focus on the course, not its course sections.
  • Emphasize active learning mastery feed-back
    testing.
  • Use common tests, as appropriate.
  • Document learning differences via assessment.
  • Realign faculty tasks without increasing faculty
    labor to
  • Offload some functions to software assistants.
  • Optimize faculty expertise interventions with
    students.
  • Increase student/instructor ratio
  • Reduce per-student direct instructional expense.

21
Strategies ? Obligations
Strategies ? Obligations
22
A Performance Initiative
A Performance Initiative
  • A public institution lacks the classroom and
    faculty capacity to keep pace with enrollment
    demand in its high-growth region. It is turning
    away students and capping enrollments in the
    highest-demand courses and programs. Analysis
    reveals a strong correlation between a worsening
    retention rate and failure in a small subset of
    its highest-demand courses.
  • It applies the common course redesign strategy
    and the flex program and service redesign
    strategy to
  • Redesign the problematic, highest-demand courses
    for flex delivery while simultaneously improving
    their learning outcomes and reducing their per
    enrollment costs (by increasing the student /
    instructor ratio) thereby improving the
    retention rate, the affordability of access, and
    convenience of access.
  • Redesign the highest-demand degree programs for
    flex delivery, thereby increasing overall
    classroom capacity without capital investment.
    Redesign other services for flex delivery to meet
    the convenience needs of flex students indeed,
    of all students.
  • The net result is improved performance in all six
    performance areas learning accountability,
    program accountability, expense accountability,
    affordability of access, convenience of access,
    and capacity for access

23
Faculty Role Quality
Faculty Role Quality
  • Learning as an Expedition
  • Instructor-Led Active Leaning

Organize Course Resources textbooks libraries web
site lectures syllabus course pack
Guide Self Study homework readings tests labs pap
ers theses
Design Guide Active Collaborative Learning as
-needed help team projects internships field
trips learningware discussionware
Faculty teams are responsible for course
program redesign
24
Common Courses
Common Courses
  • Taught at almost all institutions account for
    at least 40-50 of all enrollments the higher
    percentage at 2-year colleges, the lower at
    4-year institutions.
  • 25-35 required or high-demand elective common
    courses in strategic programs such as
  • College prep program developmental, remedial
  • General education program (AA) about 20-25
    courses
  • Nursing, teacher education, business or other
    high-demand workforce or professional programs
  • Typically taught in multiple sections
  • Common exams are possible, even nationally normed
    common exams.
  • Account for at least 20-25 of total
    institutional expenses, assuming direct
    instructional expenses to be about 50 of total
    expenses.

25
Course Redesign History
Course Redesign History
  • Course redesign principles models are based on
    the National Center for Academic Transformations
    Program in Course Redesign funded by the Pew
    Trusts.
  • 30 institutions, 10 per year over three years
  • Each institution redesigned one common course to
    improve learning outcomes while reducing
    per-enrollment instructional costs.
  • Direct instructional cost savings averaged 40.
  • Systematic redesign of common courses averaging
    40 savings in direct instructional expenses can
    result in total institutional expense reductions
    of 8-10.
  • The Center now has over 60 institutions, systems,
    and companies participating in its Redesign
    Alliance to share resources and effective
    practices for improving learning outcomes while
    simultaneously reducing per-student costs in
    common courses.

26
Client Examples
Customer Examples
Mount St. Marys
27
Culture of Performance
Culture of Performance Performance improvement
redesign projects Assigns responsibility
resources ? ? Accounts for performance
results Performance planning management
processes Provides real-time analysis
insight ? ? Assigns scorecard metrics to
goals Performance scorecards analytics Enables
trend analysis ? ? Adjusts the data
models Performance warehousing data
modeling Performance-Focused Institutional
Leadership Enables systemic productivity
increases ? ? Aligns measurable goals w/ IT
priorities High-Performing IT Organization IT
Services Individualized self-service
portal Single login authentication Systems
integration Unified public website IT
governance, planning, management
accountability 24 x 365 toll-free help desk
other support services Networks, servers,
security, recovery, ERP, CMS, other
systems Institutional Digital Utility Foundation
Bridging the Gap Requires Institutional
Leadership IT Leadership
28
Culture of Performance Performance improvement
redesign projects Assigns responsibility
resources ? ? Accounts for performance
results Performance planning management
processes Provides real-time analysis
insight ? ? Assigns scorecard metrics to
goals Performance scorecards analytics Enables
trend analysis ? ? Adjusts the data
models Performance warehousing data
modeling Performance-Focused Institutional
Leadership
  • Develop data models around key institutional
    metrics.
  • Simplify operational reporting to eliminate a
    flood of data reports that are difficult to
    develop and ultimately not of much use at the
    cabinet level
  • Extract select longitudinal data into an
    institutional data warehouse to provide a
    foundation for institutional analytics and
    scorecard reporting.

29
Culture of Performance Performance improvement
redesign projects Assigns responsibility
resources ? ? Accounts for performance
results Performance planning management
processes Provides real-time analysis
insight ? ? Assigns scorecard metrics to
goals Performance scorecards analytics Enables
trend analysis ? ? Adjusts the data
models Performance warehousing data
modeling Performance-Focused Institutional
Leadership
  • Provide flexible, ad-hoc (anytime) performance
    reporting and analysis, both at the operational
    and longitudinal (trend) levels.
  • Provide configurable, flexible scorecards for
    monitoring key performance indicators at the
    institutional and departmental levels.
  • Provide ad hoc analytics capabilities within the
    scorecard model to query the institutional data
    warehouse to identify trends and gain insights
    into the future.

30
Culture of Performance Performance improvement
redesign projects Assigns responsibility
resources ? ? Accounts for performance
results Performance planning management
processes Provides real-time analysis
insight ? ? Assigns scorecard metrics to
goals Performance scorecards analytics Enables
trend analysis ? ? Adjusts the data
models Performance warehousing data
modeling Performance-Focused Institutional
Leadership
  • Senior consultants with a command of academic
    culture, shared governance, and institutional
    research to help the institution
  • Align mission goals with measurable objectives.
  • Translate measurable objectives to the technical
    team responsible for implementing and evolving
    scorecards and analytics.
  • Guide a performance council in creating open
    and evidence-driven institutional performance
    planning and management processes.
  • Align academic, financial, and student service
    redesign strategies with key performance
    indicators requiring improvement.
  • Plan and source IT-enabled redesign projects for
    improving priority performance indicators.

31
Culture of Performance Performance improvement
redesign projects Assigns responsibility
resources ? ? Accounts for performance
results Performance planning management
processes Provides real-time analysis
insight ? ? Assigns scorecard metrics to
goals Performance scorecards analytics Enables
trend analysis ? ? Adjusts the data
models Performance warehousing data
modeling Performance-Focused Institutional
Leadership
  • Redesign academic, financial, student service
    processes for efficient website- and
    portal-integrated self-service for example
  • Redesign degree programs for flex delivery to
    targeted audiences (the convenience factor).
  • Redesign the cluster of high-enrollment common
    courses to improve learning and the per-credit
    direct cost of instruction.
  • Redesign enrollment management processes.
  • Outsource business and student service processes
    selectively to avoid new capital and payroll
    costs, while improving services at reasonable
    per-student expense

32
Performance Improvement
Performance Improvement
Performance Improvement Redesign Projects
Discover
Monitor
FinalizeLife Cycle
InitializeLife Cycle
Prioritize
Portalize
Planning Management Processes Align Plan -
goals metrics - redesigns - departments -
sourcing Adjust Assign - metrics -
responsibilities - scorecards -
resources Performance Council
Scorecards Analytics
Data WarehouseData Models
Redesign
Scale
Pilot
Adjust
Assess
33
Performance Barriers?
Performance Barriers?
  • No performance infrastructure and reporting to
    identify and account for strategic performance
    initiatives/metrics.
  • Faculty leadership executive leadership not
    collaboratively aligned to meet performance
    challenges
  • Limited experience with the service redesign
    strategies that can improve academic business
    performance
  • Strategic plan fails to include performance
    metrics
  • Inability to focus the expense use of IT on
    strategic initiatives
  • Too small to afford robust IT need to share
    services
  • No economies of scale from being part of a
    system, district, consortium, or commercial
    external sourcing relationship
  • Inadequate or dysfunctional IT unit
  • Weak leadership or management
  • Weak service mentality
  • Staff recruiting retention difficulties
  • Inadequate IT infrastructure and/or service
    coverage 24 x 365
  • Escalating or unpredictable IT costs
  • Inadequate resources for IT projects
  • Selection, planning, conversion for ERP, CMS,
    analytics, etc.
  • Services / systems integration web portal
    projects

34
64,000 Question
64,000 Question
  • Is Yours a Culture of Performance?
  • A High Performance Institution?
  • Systemic Progress?
  • Random Acts of Progress?
  • Progress requires
  • order where there is change
  • change where there is order.
  • Alfred North Whitehead

35
Our partnership will allow us to scale support
for e-learning while not losing focus on other
aspects of our IT plan. Dick Leurig, CIO
  • Goals
  • Put the student at the center of the Colleges
    universe.
  • Focus on the quality and flexibility of
    instruction other services.
  • Increase capacity to maintain double-digit growth
    for a decade.
  • Challenges
  • Prior academic technology efforts lacked scalable
    support
  • Increase support for academic technology and its
    applications without losing focus on other IT
    initiatives
  • Services fro SunGard Higher Education
  • Onsite (5 FTEs) remote academic professionals
    for faculty support academic redesign projects
  • 24x7 hosting, infrastructure, tech support
    services for WebCT-based courses programs
  • Outcomes
  • Comprehensive institution-wide faculty
    development services for instructional
    applications on-ground on-line
  • Redesign of the Fast Track Math program to
    increase remediation capacity decrease the need
    for math remediation upon matriculation

36
The company helped us respond to market needs
while generating new discretionary revenues. .
Russ Adkins, Associate VP
  • Goals
  • Seize immediate contract/grant opportunities to
    redesign selected for-credit non-credit
    programs to meet workforce needs
  • Lay the service financial foundation for
    institution-wide academic technology faculty
    development support.
  • Challenges
  • Academic technology efforts lacked reliable,
    scalable support.
  • Capitalizing institution-wide faculty development
    rapid-response program redesign/development was
    impossible.
  • Services from SunGard Higher Education
  • Extensive academic technology planning services
  • Onsite academic support for market-driven program
    redesign projects
  • Onsite remote academic support for
    institution-wide faculty development academic
    IT applications
  • 24x7 hosting, infrastructure, tech support
    services for WebCT
  • Outcomes
  • Online certification programs for local hospitals
    IT corporation.
  • Modular online nursing program three different
    degree tracks.
  • Market-driven enrollment profits to support
    institution-wide
  • Faculty development services for using technology
    in instruction on the ground online
  • 24x7 hosting, infrastructure, and tech support
    services for WebCT

37
Our partnership significantly enhances our
efforts to plan for meet the high expectations
of our faculty, staff, students. . Vincent
Gorman, Special Asst. to the President
  • Goals
  • Stabilize IT costs service reliability.
  • Improve stakeholder satisfaction with IT
    technology services.
  • Position the college to plan, implement,
    support academic IT services initiatives.
  • Challenges
  • Unstable IT expenses and support services
  • Minimal support for faculty use of technology in
    the curriculum.
  • No academic technology plan
  • Services from SunGard Higher Education
  • Bottom-line, institution-wide responsibility for
    onsite on-call management/support of all
    technologies their administrative academic
    applications.
  • Onsite remote academic support for
    institution-wide faculty development academic
    IT applications
  • Turn-key IT certification program curriculum,
    marketing, recruiting, delivery, 24x7 support.
  • Outcomes
  • Cost-effective, stakeholder endorsed IT
    management support..
  • Institution-wide academic support for faculty
    their IT applications.
  • Market-driven profits from IT certification
    training program.

38

In 1997 we selected the company to be our managed
services partner and weve never looked back as
its professionals help us innovate compete at
the leading edge. . Dr. Jon Larson, President
  • Goals
  • Stabilize IT expenses improve IT services
  • Support faculty efforts to use technology in
    instruction.
  • Support strategic academic technology projects.
  • Challenges
  • Unstable IT costs crisis-level dissatisfaction
    with IT services
  • Difficult to meet strategic academic needs
  • Neither capital funds nor time to increase
    enrollment capacity
  • Services from SunGard Higher Education
  • Extensive IT academic technology planning
    services
  • Comprehensive IT management support services,
    including course management system academic
    application support
  • Onsite remote academic support for academic
    redesign projects
  • Outcomes
  • IT cost savings improved IT academic
    technology services
  • Stakeholder satisfaction with all aspects of IT
    support
  • Comprehensive faculty development services for
    using technology in instruction on-ground
    on-line
  • Redesign of the nursing program to increase
    capacity while meeting community needs avoiding
    new classroom costs
  • Redesign of two high-enrollment general education
    courses to lay the foundation for systemic
    improvements in learning outcomes reductions in
    instructional costs across the gen ed curriculum

39
Our relationship with SunGard Higher Education is
much more a partnership than a client/vendor
relationship. Sandy Shugart, President
  • Goals
  • Improve access to and the quality of IT services.
  • Scale IT services to meet growth stakeholder
    expectations.
  • Expand the reach of the IT certification program.
  • Challenges
  • Rapid growth in excess of 15
  • Diversity of the student body
  • Limited financial resources IT expertise
  • Services from SunGard Higher Education
  • Comprehensive IT management support services,
    including WebCT support
  • Migrate from mainframe to Web-enabled
    infrastructure
  • Institution-wide faculty support
  • Turn-key adult learning center IT certification
    solution
  • Develop support robust student learning support
    systems (Atlas)
  • Outcomes
  • Saved millions in IT expenses over a multi-year
    period
  • Fulfilling the promise of being a learning
    college
  • Recognized by National Alliance of Business CC
    of 1999
  • Earning new profits from adult learning center
    IT certification

40
Value is the relationship between what we pay and
what we get. National Louis gets a ton of value
through this relationship. Tony Chaitin, VP of
Finance Administration
  • Goals
  • Bring IT services to the web and contain their
    costs.
  • Use web services to serve NLUs student base of
    adult learners more effectively and conveniently.
  • Challenges
  • Outdated IT infrastructure and weak IT staffing.
  • Lack of data for academic and business decisions.
  • Student and faculty expectations for better IT
    services.
  • Services from SunGard Higher Education (starting
    in 2001)
  • Network upgrade and conversion to Banner.
  • CIO full-service IT staff
  • 24x7 support for WebCT hosting, infrastructure,
    and support services and an Online Learning
    Center for faculty training and instructional
    design support
  • Outcomes
  • IT cost savings in excess of 1.5M over the past
    4 years
  • Increased stakeholder satisfaction

41
The relationship with SunGard Higher Education is
a true partnership. Robert Tyndall, Vice
Chancellor for ITS
  • Goals
  • Reorganize integrate disparate IT
    initiatives/resources.
  • Meet mandated enrollment increase via online
    learning.
  • Challenges
  • Little lead time to accommodate 4,000 more
    students
  • Less space per student than sister institutions
  • No significant capital funding increase on the
    horizon
  • Services from SunGard Higher Education
  • Comprehensive IT academic assessment and
    planning
  • 24x7 WebCT hosting, infrastructure, support
    services
  • Project management training support for
    faculty-led training
  • Outcomes
  • New IT governance and change-management model
  • About 60 fully online core courses as options for
    residential students many Web-enhanced courses
  • Technology College online fluency
    certification
  • Blended model of online on-ground courses and
    services has relieved space constraints
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