TAG Membership and Meetings 2013-2014

22 08 2013

In the middle of getting organized for Fall 2013-2014 and just thought I’d post about some of the membership changes for this year. Here’s who we have on board so far:

Faculty – CAS
Dave Dzurec, History (co-chair and Faculty Senate liaison)
Tim Cannon, Psychology/Neuroscience
Tara Fay, Biology

Faculty – KSOM
Kim Daniloski, Management/Marketing
Katie Iacocca, Operations and Information Management [on leave for Fall 2013]

Faculty – PCPS
Teresa Conte, Nursing
Paul Cutrufello, Exercise Science and Sport
Sandy Pesavento, Education

Faculty – Library
Kristen Yarmey (co-chair)

Staff participants
Jim Franceschelli, Director of IT Services
Eugeniu Grigorescu, Director, CTLE
Lori Nidoh, Director of Marketing, Public Relations

Past co-chair Jeremy Sepinsky (CAS) has stepped down for a leave of absence, and past member Kevin Wilkerson (PCPS) has stepped down after a three-year term of service. Current member Katie Iacocca (KSOM) will be on leave for Fall 2013 but will return for Spring 2014. With those changes in mind, we’d like to recruit additional faculty representatives from CAS, PCPS, and KSOM to join us this year — please let us know if you’re interested or if you would like to recommend someone from your college! We’d like at least one new member from each college, but we’re happy to add more if there are enthusiastic volunteers :)

Our monthly meetings are scheduled for:

  • Wednesday, September 4 – 2:00pm-2:50pm in LSC591 (CTLE Conference Room)
  • Wednesday, October 2  – 2:00pm-2:50pm in LSC591 (CTLE Conference Room)
  • Wednesday, November 6  – 2:00pm-2:50pm in WML305




TAG Senate Status

2 01 2013

(This post is long overdue – many apologies! My notes on the Senate discussion are a little rough, so please send me any corrections/clarifications you have.)

At the November 9 meeting, the Faculty Senate passed a few motions (#3.2012-13, #4.2012-13, #5.2012-13) regarding faculty representation on University committees. I asked for some clarification at the meeting about what committees would fall under the new language, since we’ve got a lot of TAG members working on various projects. Further discussion with members of the Senate Executive Committee indicated that there was some murkiness about TAG’s official connection to the Senate.  Back in 2010, when Jeremy and I approached the Senate about creating TAG, we got verbal approval as a subcommittee of the Senate’s Academic Support committee, but there wasn’t ever a vote or any formal documentation of our status.

The Senate Executive Committee was kind enough to sit down with me early in December to hash out some language formalizing TAG’s status as a Senate subcommittee.  From a TAG perspective, we were looking for a structured, defined relationship to the Senate (and a clear communication channel to the Senate), but with a flexible membership — ideally, TAG’s membership should be representative of the faculty as a whole, but should also take into consideration a faculty member’s interest in or expertise related to technology. I wrote up some notes for the Senators about TAG’s current makeup and the kinds of projects we’ve been working on.

At the December 14 Senate meeting, the Executive Committee introduced the following motion:

A proposal to change the Faculty Senate Bylaws to include the Technology Advisory Group (TAG) as a formal subcommittee of the Academic Support Committee.

The Academic Support Committee has from five to ten members of whom a majority must be members of the Faculty Senate. This committee prepares recommendations for consideration by the Faculty Senate on all aspects of support for academic programs. The Academic Support Committee has oversight of the Technology Advisory Group (TAG), a standing subcommittee of the ASC. The total membership of TAG is flexible, but should strive for representation from each of the five colleges.* The subcommittee must include one Faculty Senator who serves as a liaison between TAG and the ASC.** The Faculty Senator can, but is not required to, serve as both a liaison to the ASC and a college representative. TAG is free to seek expertise outside the faculty*** to complete its membership.

A discussion followed, primarily focusing on oversight and composition of TAG. There were a few concerns about TAG’s level of autonomy – some Senators suggested that TAG be chaired**** by a Senator on the Academic Support committee, and/or that TAG’s members be appointed by Senators from Academic Support. Others were concerned about micromanaging TAG when, to date, the group has been functioning well. General consensus seemed to be that more clarification on TAG’s goals and oversight may be needed in the future, but that for now the proposed language would be sufficient.

Some clarifications were proposed — “representation from each of the five colleges” was changed to reflect that CGCE does not have its own faculty, and “must include one Faculty Senator” was changed to “must include at least one Faculty Senator”. With this clarified wording****, the motion passed.

Since the proposal is an amendment to the Faculty Senate Bylaws, it will next go to a full faculty vote for approval, sometime after the start of the Spring 2013 semester. A 2/3 majority of those voting is needed to amend the bylaws.

Many thanks to the Executive Committee and the rest of the Faculty Senators for their time and consideration!

——————————

Notes:

* Currently, we have 4 members from CAS, 4 from PCPS, 2 from KSOM, and 1 from the Library.

**Currently, TAG’s membership includes two Faculty Senators (Katie Iacocca and Dave Dzurec).

***From the beginning, TAG has included staff participants in order to facilitate communication about technology on campus.

****For the record, neither Jeremy nor I are opposed to a change in leadership for TAG. Any volunteers? :)

*****I  don’t trust my notes on the exact wording changes – I’ll post the altered language when the meeting minutes come out.





Meeting Notes 11/11/2010

11 11 2010

Another month, another TAG meeting.  We had a packed agenda today and did our best to at least touch on each issue.

New member:

  • Anne Marie Stamford, Assistant Provost for Operations, has joined the committee as a representative for the academic administration.  Anne Marie was invited to join after we realized she was dealing with some of the same questions as TAG (e.g., how to get feedback from faculty on technology issues). Welcome, Anne Marie!

Follow-up on survey results:

  • The results from our 2010 survey on faculty communication have been posted to the TAG site, both summarized and in full.
  • Jim, Jeremy, and Kristen drafted up responses to the “Top 9” major concerns from the survey comments.  TAG members have until Monday to make any edits/suggestions.
  • What’s the best way to distribute these “Top 9” responses to faculty?  On one hand, we want to get the information out quickly rather than holding it back – and some of the issues (i.e., requesting new computers) are time sensitive. On the other hand, we do want people to actually consider and respond to the “Top 9,” not just ignore them as tl;dr.  Our current plan is to post them (individually) to the TAG site, and then send out an all-faculty email with the first response on communication, and links to the next 8 responses.  If we don’t get a lot of feedback on the other 8 responses, we can also send out updates on the next 8 posts at regularly spaced intervals (e.g., 2x/week).  Jeremy and Kristen will coordinate this with Anne Marie.
  • Sending email to all faculty that includes non-scranton.edu links is somewhat of an issue. IR wants to make sure that people are very cautious about what links they click on, in light of the many recent phishing attacks.
  • Anne Marie suggested that some of the “Top 9” responses would be of interest to staff.  She will share them with the Data Technologies group.
  • More detailed statistical analysis of the survey results is on the way.

Catalog

  • There are several reasons why faculty feel strongly about having paper copies of the catalog (e.g., ease of advising, being able to bookmark/make notes, concerns about monitor sharing…).  This seems to be a major issue mostly in CAS, where most faculty are advisors (unlike in PCPS and KSOM, which have professional advisors).
  • We posted a PDF of the catalog to the TAG site.  Anne Marie has 10 printed copies of the catalog in the Provost’s Office if anyone wants one, and she will look into printing enough copies of the catalog for all advisors next year.

Feedback from English Department

  • Teresa brought feedback from the English department on three main issues: the need for a print copy of the phone book/directory, recommendations for a WYSIWYG editor for HTML code (for the CMS), and difficulty with TSC customer service.
  • In general, TAG will respond to faculty feedback like this by 1) posting a summary of the question, with a response from TAG, to the TAG site and 2) emailing the faculty member directly with the response.
  • Kristen will coordinate with Teresa to get responses to these concerns posted to the TAG site.

Soliciting faculty feedback

  • There are several issues on which faculty feedback is needed, including the CMS (per Anne Marie), classroom mediation (per Jim), and faculty areas of technology interest/expertise.  What’s the best way for TAG to gather this information? Our communication survey was useful, but didn’t hit all faculty.
  • TAG will work on assigning liaisons from TAG to each department.  Liaisons could visit February department meetings to solicit feedback from entire departments.  They’d also be able to let faculty know that TAG exists and talk about how we can be a resource.
  • To assign TAG members to departments, Cathy will work on dividing PCPS departments between herself and Kevin, and Jeremy and Teresa will work on assigning CAS departments between them, Tim, and Kristen.  Neither SP or Sufian were in attendance, so we will ask them to choose KSOM departments.  Jim and Anne Marie will send Kristen specific questions on which they need faculty feedback.

Email and Calendaring change

  • Campus email will be moving to Microsoft Live@Edu.  To smooth this transition, TAG has offered to help IR communicate with faculty about the transition.
  • Since this is a big issue, we’ll have a meeting sometime after January specifically dedicated to the email issue.  By then, we should have some test accounts so TAG members can identify potential faculty concerns.
  • We discussed describing the change as a benefit rather than an annoyance – while faculty will have to learn a new interface, they’ll get a much larger quota and along with other new features. We also need to communicate to Google fans that, while Gmail was considered, IR did have valid reasons for choosing Microsoft.

TAG Policy

  • A few TAG members drafted a policy for codifying how TAG interacts with IR and facilitates faculty feedback into technology decisions.  We’d like the rest of the TAG members’ feedback on the draft policy, with an eventual goal of passing it up to the Faculty Senate Academic Support committee.   We’ll post the policy on the TAG site next week after all members have gotten to review it.
  • Cathy pointed out that the policy does not address all of TAG’s original goals – so we need to be clear that the document is not a mission statement for TAG but instead a single policy that defines one aspect of TAG’s goals.

Other points of discussion

  • We discussed the idea of visiting Dean’s Conferences in order to spread the word about TAG, but we agreed that checking in with the Faculty Senate would be best before approaching the Deans directly.
  • Cathy and Kristen will meet after Thanksgiving to start working on aggregating classroom technology resources for faculty.




A Plan Comes Together

9 08 2010

After a long but fun summer of Northern Light-powered planning and discussion, the University of Scranton Technology Advisory Group is about to officially get on its feet and meet for the first time.  While we’re still working through everyone’s schedules to set up a meeting time, we’re excited to announce our 2010-2011 inaugural membership.  Many thanks to the faculty and staff members who have volunteered to work with us!

TAG this year will consist of…

Three faculty members from the College of Arts and Sciences:
Dr. Timothy Cannon, Psychology/Neuroscience
Prof. Teresa Grettano, English and Theatre
Dr. Jeremy Sepinsky, Physics

Two faculty members from the Panuska College of Professional Studies:
Dr. Catherine Lovecchio, Nursing
Dr. Kevin Wilkerson, Counseling and Human Services

One faculty member from the Kania School of Management (although we’re trying to recruit one more):
Dr. S. P. Chattopadhyay, Management/Marketing

One faculty librarian from the Weinberg Memorial Library:
Prof. Kristen Yarmey-Tylutki, Digital Services Librarian

And two staff members representing Planning & Information Resources and the Center for Teaching and Learning Excellence, respectively:
James Franceschelli, Director of IT Services
Eugeniu Grigorescu, Associate Director, CTLE

We’ll start off by figuring out how to build communication bridges between faculty and IR, and by deciding how TAG fits in with other University committees and services. Let us know if you have any questions or suggestions!