iTunes U Live Webcasts

9 11 2012

http://images.apple.com/dm/us/12/3587/i/main.jpg

Apple is doing a few free webcasts for educators over the next few weeks to demonstrate how iPads and iTunes U are being used in teaching and learning.  Just passing the info along for anyone interested:

Webcast 1: Getting to Know iTunes U (Register)
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
10:00 a.m.–11:00 a.m. PST
Find out how iTunes U is inspiring new ways to teach with iPad. You’ll learn how iTunes U brings a vast library of content — textbooks, videos, web links, and more — into a single app for students. You’ll also get to see an iTunes U course from a student’s perspective, and ask teachers live during the webcast how they’re educating with iPad.

Webcast 2: Creating Courses with iTunes U Course Manager (Register)
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
10:00 a.m.–11:00 a.m. PST
Get step-by-step instructions on how to build a course for iPad using dynamic content. Educators will share their experience, creating courses, and you’ll hear how their students are learning with iPad in surprising new ways.

Webcast 3: Creating Learning Materials for Your Course (Register)
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
10:00 a.m.–11:00 a.m. PST
Learn how to find, select, and add rich content to your courses and develop your own educational materials. Get tips and tricks for editing, capturing, and adding video. Plus, see demos on creating original content with iBooks Author and illustrating your ideas with widgets. It won’t be long before you’re building your own exciting courses for iPad.





TAG Meeting 2012-11-07

8 11 2012

On November 7, TAG held its third and final Fall 2012 meeting.

1. Code of Responsible Computing Committee update

Dave Dzurec (History) and Jim Franceschelli (IT Services) are co-chairing a committee charged with drafting an update to the Code of Responsible Computing. The goal of the committee is to create a single policy for faculty, staff, and students that will define responsible use of information technology at the University.

Dave and Jim have been reviewing acceptable use policies from other universities  and have almost finished a draft for the rest of the committee to review.  After review by the committee, the policy will go to VP/CIO Jerry DeSanto, and then it will enter the University governance system for full approval (probably in 2013-2014).

Faculty representatives on the committee (as appointed by the Faculty Senate) are Dave, Wesley Wang (Economics/Finance), and Bob Spinelli (Health Administration and Human Resources). The Staff and Student Senates also have two representatives each.

We discussed briefly how the new policy should be disseminated and shared with students and faculty after it is approved. Sandy asked whether new students/faculty/staff will need to sign off on the policy when they begin using University services to make sure they are aware of it. Kristen suggested incorporating a mention of the policy into the New Faculty Orientation. She will also suggest to the Associate Dean of the Library, Bonnie Strohl, that public patrons using Library computers would be informed of the policy in some way.

2. CTLE Technology Liaison

The Center for Teaching and Learning has two faculty liaisons (currently Anthony Ferzola and Marian Farrell) who provide an interface between faculty teaching and the CTLE’s resources. Faculty can reach out to the liaisons for support (e.g., teaching observations), and the CTLE can reach out to the liaisons for input on needed resources. The liaisons also run the faculty mentor/mentee program.

The CTLE wants to establish a similar faculty liaison who would specifically address academic technology questions and needs. They did a pilot project last year, with Sandy Pesavento (Education) serving as the faculty technology liaison, to see what role(s) a liaison should fill. Eugeniu asked TAG (including Sandy) for feedback on what a technology liaison’s “job description” should look like.

During the pilot year, Sandy did some technology trainings (higher order thinking, student response systems, smartboards, etc) and teaching observations (e.g., coming to a class to suggest technology tools that might be helpful to the instructor). One of the difficulties during the pilot year was that few faculty members outside of PCPS were aware that Sandy was available for consultation on technology issues, though, so a challenge for the future will be finding ways to promote the services the liaison provides.

We discussed other needs that a liaison could address. Several TAG members suggested a repository or database of some kind that would identify 1) educationally relevant technologies and 2) if/how faculty at Scranton and other universities have implemented them.  Katie noted that sometimes faculty don’t necessarily know what tools are available to them. Jeremy and Dave expressed interest in hearing from faculty members who have been doing pedagogical research with technology in the classroom – e.g., via Friday presentations like the Office of Research Services seminar series.

We also discussed the difficulty of knowing who to call for help – that is, CTLE supports faculty use of technology for pedagogy, but IT Services supports the actual hardware and software that faculty use in the classroom. Teresa suggested a flow chart to indicate who to call and when.

3. Windows 7 and Viewfinity

As Windows 7 is rolled out with new University computers, your account on your desktop/laptop will change from being an administrator account to a standard user account. This is a security measure to try to prevent users from downloading and installing malicious software. By default, standard users can’t install or delete applications, as administrators can.

We were concerned about this limitation when TAG first learned about it, but IT Services has put in a lot of work to figure out a good solution for faculty members so that this change doesn’t affect our work. Using Viewfinity privilege management software, faculty users can be automatically and temporarily elevated to administrators so we can install whatever software we need when we need it.

Kristen has been piloting Viewfinity as a faculty user since the middle of the summer, with excellent results.  There’s a small popup window that comes up each time you begin to install a program that asks for a “business justification,” but you can simply say you are using the program for teaching, research, etc – no lengthy explanation required. When you click OK, you are automatically bumped up to administrator while the program installs, and you are automatically bumped back down to standard user once the installation is complete. Commonly used software (Skype, iTunes, etc) is whitelisted to speed things up. Overall, the process is smooth and seamless — many thanks to Jim and the IT Services staff for finding a way to accommodate faculty needs.

Viewfinity has another big feature – Remote Desktop assistance! When you call the Technology Support Center, you’ll be able to share your desktop with the support staff so that they can help you easily from a distance. This service is in development and will be available soon. It will always have a prompt – your desktop won’t be shared without your approval.

Faculty members with XP machines will get Viewfinity via KBOX, so you’ll have Remote Desktop capability, but you will still maintain an administrator account (and XP) until you get a new computer.  Faculty members receiving new machines will have Windows 7 and a standard user account, with Viewfinity.

Viewfinity is not supported on Mac or Linux, so faculty using Mac or Linux machines are not affected by any of these changes.

Classroom and lab computers are all Windows 7 now, but they do *not* run Viewfinity — they have Deep Freeze instead. So you can install programs on classroom and lab computers, but those installations will disappear each time the machine shuts down. If you need to install software in a classroom or lab that you need to use frequently, submit a request to the TSC via Footprints.

4. Infrastructure for Computerized Testing

We were running out of time, so we didn’t get to discuss this agenda item. Jim suggested that a work group form to work on some possible solutions, since we haven’t made much progress on this issue. Jim, Teresa, Sandy, and Eugeniu will start to work on this.

5. & 6. WordPress Site Organization & Luminis Tab

No time for these agenda items either – Kristen will be in touch with TAG members via email.

TAG will not be meeting in December, so our next formal meeting will be in Spring 2013. TAG members will still be communicating and working throughout December and January, though, so as always please feel free to contact us with questions, concerns, or suggestions.





my.scranton downtime at 4:30pm today

7 11 2012

Just got this notice — PIR is working on myScranton portal issues this afternoon:

Sungard has recommended some configuration changes for the myScranton portal that necessitate a restart. This will occur today at 4:30 PM. Expected downtime is less than 30 minutes.





Feedback regarding the IT Tactical Plan

5 11 2012

Over the summer, TAG was asked by IR to respond to a number of technology questions posed by Jerry DeSanto, VP/CIO. Planning and Information Resources is in the process of creating their 3-5 year IT Tactical Plan, and the questions were targeted at the expected needs of the faculty in the coming years. To that end, TAG developed decided to generate a response from the TAG members themselves, as well as to poll the university faculty for their input. Here, we post two letters sent to Jerry DeSanto in early November, one detailing the responses that the Technology Advisory Group had to the questions, the other a summary of the responses from the all-faculty survey.

ITResponse-TAG

ITResponse-Survey





Firefox Upgrades Now Available through IT Services

31 10 2012

Jim Franceschelli gives us the following update from IT Services:

In the effort to support users and provide them with a modern and secure web-browsing platform, IT services is now installing and supporting up-to-date versions of Firefox.  

Historically, browsers updates have been limited only to those which are fully supported by the ERP / Banner system.  IT services will be lifting this restriction on Firefox, but keeping IE updates restricted to only those versions which are fully supported.  This will means that all IT services computers will contain (and IT services will support) one browser that is guaranteed to be fully compatible with ERP / Banner (Internet Explorer 8.0) and one which has modern features and security (Firefox).

The Information Technology Service (ITS) department will be pushing the newest version of Firefox to University owned computers in offices on campus via KBOX beginning on November 2, 2012. 

Once you install this update and open Firefox, you may be prompted with a series of screens on which you need to make choices.

  • Select Your Add-ons
    • Click the Add-ons you want to use
    • Click Next
  • Select your Add-ons (2nd screen)
    • Displays which Add-ons are disabled but will be enabled as soon as they are compatible and which ones will be updated.
    • Click Next
  • Your default home page (most likely my.scranton.edu)
  • Default Browser pop-up box
    • Asks if you want to make Firefox your default browser
    • We recommend you uncheck “Always perform this check when starting Firefox”.
    • Click Yes  –  if you want Firefox to be your default browser
    • Click No  –  if you generally use a different browser such as IE

 If you have questions about this upgrade, please contact the Technology Support Center at (570) 941-4357 or techsupport@scranton.edu.

 





Guidelines for the use of Cloud Computing

16 10 2012

On Thursday of last week Jerry DeSanto, the VP for Planning and CIO, sent out an email introducing the faculty to the outlining some guidelines as to the appropriate use of Cloud Computing. Cloud computing can prove a significant risk to student privacy which needs to be taken into consideration when faculty consider their use.

You can download a PDF copy of the guidelines here.

We recommend that faculty read this document to inform themselves about what Cloud Computing is, as well as what risks they adopt by using the service. If you have any questions, please feel free to send them to tag-members@royallists.scranton.edu.

TAG is also in the process of writing a memo about the privacy consideration of some cloud computing services, which we hope to distribute later this semester.





State of IT – Notes from September IT Forum

3 10 2012

Last week, CIO and Vice President for Planning Jerry DeSanto presented on the “State of IT” at the semester’s first IT Forum. His talk provided some really interesting insight into how CIOs strategically plan for the future – see his slides (in pptx) for more detail.

Some of the trends that Jerry discussed:

  • Consumerization – consumers bring their interest in technology to the workplace, and increasingly they’re also bringing their own devices (BYOD) to the workplace as well. For CIOs, this means a shift to supporting a wider variety of devices, with less depth of support for any one device/platform.
  • Cloud services – as we use more cloud computing services, we rely less on the computing power of our desktop computers. Thin clients let users access software from the cloud, so you don’t have to be at a specific workstation to use certain software.
  • Security – cloud computing raises a lot of issues in terms of security and data management – e.g., who owns the data? Is it secure? Is it exportable? Terms of service become very important. IR is working on some additional security initiatives, like two-factor authentication (for high risk data users), forced password changes, and guidelines for remote access (under development) – that is, how to safely work with restricted/confidential data from a non-University device.
  • Teaching and Learning – lots of new developments here – MOOCs, learning analytics, software licensing…
  • Network – The redundancy and reliability of the University network have become increasingly important. At the same time, there are increasing demands on the network (video streaming, gaming…). Our network just underwent a huge upgrade – our bandwidth is now 500 Mb, as compared to 50 Mb back in 2008.
  • Big data – corporations are increasingly leveraging data about their consumers to make decisions and to get a competitive edge. We might start seeing some of these techniques used in higher ed.
  • Business continuity – disaster recovery is really important. We have a good on-site data center, but we need an off-site backup as well.
  • Workforce and services – soft skills are becoming as important in IT as technical skills. As more software-as-a-service tools become available, there’s less need for home-grown solutions.

So there are lots of challenges ahead for Jerry and the IR division. Jerry has given TAG some questions he has about campus technology needs – we’ll be talking at our meeting today about how we can get input from the rest of the faculty. (More notes to come.)





Departmental Websites

12 09 2012

One of the issues TAG is tackling this fall is departmental websites (as distinct from faculty member websites, which we worked out with the CTLE and PR last year). The big question is: Who has responsibility for creating and updating content on academic department websites?  Some background information —

–Departmental web pages are really important for admissions and PR – they get a lot of hits and a lot of attention (as seen in Google Analytics).

–Departmental web pages are housed in the University’s content management system (CMS) and follow templates so that all University pages are consistent.

–The CMS is managed by Public Relations. (Lori Nidoh represents PR on TAG).

–The University’s Web Guidelines break web pages into categories, and each category includes information about who has what roles. Two parts, excerpted here, mention departmental websites. Section III.C.b (“Academic Departmental Pages”):

“Academic department pages are vital for prospective students, current students and faculty. Departments are encouraged to maintain their pages and to develop content on their pages that reflects the distinctive interests and qualities of the faculty and their discipline. Academic departments should appoint at least a contributor and approver for their pages and can request to have a person designated as a publisher following appropriate training.”

and Appendix 1 (“Academic Uses of the Web”):

“The Web is a valuable opportunity to present creatively and dramatically departments, academic and extracurricular programs, and the faculty members that make it all work. Academic use of the Web is ultimately governed by academic freedom, as described in the Faculty Handbook, and the Code of Responsible Computing. Each academic department will have pages on the University’s Web site
created and maintained by the department using the University’s Web Content Management System (CMS), and structured by the templates provided in the CMS. These pages present the formal administration of departments and the curricula that comprise academic programs, that is, the material approved and published in the catalog. The content of these pages require approvals from the chair of the department or the program director and the relevant dean.

1. The academic department page (see Fig. 1 and Fig. 2) serves as the entry point or ‘landing page’ for prospective students and other guests through Web searching. Except for a the top navigation bar and a block containing Admissions information, the content of this page consists of input from the academic department chairperson or the program director and faculty associated with the program, as approved by the Dean. The faculty of the programs are encouraged to provide original content for program pages to make them as dynamic and engaging as possible.”

–Course descriptions are managed in the centralized University catalog.

–Academic departments were supposed to identify a “point person” in the department who would be responsible for the department’s site, and their work would count as departmental/University service. (See Dave’s post from last year on his experiences with the History department page.)

–A faculty member “point person” needs to attend CMS training to learn how to edit the department website. Text and minor structural changes can be made by faculty, but additional customizations generally require additional support from PR.

–Faculty have some concerns about this plan. A summary:

  • The CMS interface is not easy to use, especially if you’re not using it regularly. It takes time to remember how to do things and to remember where files are/should be.
  • Editing and updating content is very time consuming – faculty “point people” may see a significant increase to their workload. There is a constant flow of information of different types that needs to be updated or revised.
  • Interactive or customized web requests still have to go through PR.

–PR’s perspective (Note: will update after consulting with Lori)

  • Faculty should be responsible for web content on academic pages.
  • Academic department pages need to be up to date and relevant to students.
  • New efforts towards developing responsive web design may affect this discussion.

–Ideas for possible solutions that we’ve come up with to date:

  1. Faculty “point people” control, provide, and publish academic department websites via the CMS.
  2. Some academic affairs staff members specialize in web publishing and implement CMS changes on behalf of their departments (?) [Academic Affairs was working on a faculty profile project last year – status of this is unknown.]
  3. Faculty provide information updates and content to an undetermined “point person” with expert knowledge of the CMS, who then alters the actual files and publishes the changes.
  4. [Rutgers model] Faculty provide information updates and content to an undetermined CMS expert – but with rolling windows of time. E.g., each Sept/January faculty could submit changes to courses. Each July, departments could submit information for new faculty, etc.
  5. ??

TAG members and PR staff, please let me know if I’ve misstated or missed something – and please let me know if you have other solution ideas or suggestions on next steps to consider!





TAG Meeting 9/12/12

12 09 2012

TAG held its first Fall 2012 meeting today.

1. Membership

We welcomed three new faculty members to TAG!

  • Tara Fay , Biology (CAS)
  • Kim Daniloski, Management/Marketing (KSOM)
  • Katie Iacocca, Operations and Information Management (KSOM)

We did a quick review of what related committees and projects TAG members are serving on this year:

  • Kristen: Mobile Apps, Luminis
  • Jeremy: lecture capture, pedagogy group
  • Dave: Code of Responsible Computing committee
  • Jim: Code of Responsible Computing committee, IRAC, among many other IR teams and projects
  • Eugeniu: IRAC, IMAC, among many other CTLE teams and projects
  • Teresa: LMS Work Group
  • Tara: LMS Work Group, pedagogy group (and testing clickers)
  • Paul (in absentia): IRAC

2. A few miscellaneous announcements

  • Katie mentioned that Brennan Hall is working well this year. Thanks so much to all of the IT Services staff who worked on Brennan’s classrooms this summer!
  • Kristen is working on moving the TAG website to the University’s local WordPress instance. That will make it easier for TAG members to log in and add information.
  • TAG meetings are in a 50 minute time slot this semester, so we’ll try to keep meetings snappy and do more of our announcements and information sharing via email.

3. Information Resources Advisory Council (IRAC) representative

Last year, Dave and Paul served on IRAC as faculty/TAG representatives. This year, Dave has agreed to co-chair (with Jim) a committee tasked with reviewing and updating the Code of Responsible Computing. Since that will be a significant project, Dave is stepping down from IRAC. Kevin volunteered to join Paul as a second faculty representative.

IRAC’s agenda this year will include the service catalog – a list of what services IR provides, where/how those services can be provided, what the expected turnaround time is, what IR’s responsibility is for each service, etc.

4. Departmental websites and the CMS

At the end of last year, we started discussing the issue of departmental websites. [See the follow-up post for more details on this discussion.]

The big question: Who has responsibility for creating and updating content on academic department websites? After a discussion of faculty concerns, we came to a consensus that the faculty would likely be willing to contribute content, but the CMS interface wasn’t user-friendly enough for faculty to be able to use it easily, especially if they weren’t using it on a consistent and regular basis. Katie suggested a model from Rutgers – faculty were responsible for updating content, but they did not have to post directly to the CMS. At regular intervals, a window would open for faculty to submit changes to certain types of information – e.g., each July, departments could add new faculty info and images. Each September/January, course information was updated. The centralized system seemed more efficient and got rid of inconsistencies.

Next steps: Our PR representative (Lori) was unable to make it to today’s meeting, so Kristen will get in touch with her to see if that kind of system might be possible for PR. Jeremy will get in touch with Anne Marie in Academic Affairs to find out if there’s a possibility for staff support with the CMS and to get an update on the status of the web profile project from last year. Katie will look for some of her records from Rutgers that might help us. The rest of the faculty were asked to compile a list of what kinds of departmental information are needed and how often each type would need to be updated. We can share this information via TAG-Discussion or TAG-Members. Kristen will post a compiled list to the TAG website.

5. FERPA considerations for cloud computing

We didn’t get to fully discuss this, but Kristen asked that everyone take a look at the FERPA post and think about how to share/clarify this information for faculty.





Student Services – Mobile

12 09 2012

A mobile web page for student services is now up at m.scranton.edu/studentservices. It includes grades, student schedule, the Library, the Aquinas, and a TV channel guide.

This project came out of the Mobile Apps work group, which includes Ben Bishop and me as faculty representatives. Here’s the announcement from work group leader Connie Wisdo:

I wanted to let you all know that the student services mobile web app has been launched in our production environment.  You can access it using m.scranton.edu/studentservices.

You’ll be seeing posters going up around campus in the next week or so to announce both this app, and also Blackboard Mobile Learn for ANGEL.

The Student Services Mobile web app will be incorporated in the Scranton app very soon (hopefully this week), and it will also appear as a menu item on the m.scranton.edu main menu.

Thanks again for all your help in getting this first version developed and launched!

I believe we will meet again as a group in November, to gather feedback and consider options for the next version of the app.  We lost both our student reps from last year, so if you have students you’d like to nominate to the group (either undergrad or grad), please let me know.