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.




Catalog Update

2 11 2010

The Provost’s Office sent out an update about the online catalog this morning (text below).  How does everyone feel about this response?  Does it resolve everyone’s concerns about being able to find departmental websites?

I’ve responded to the Provost’s email with a recommendation that departmental websites also be linked to from the Department pages within the catalog (e.g., for Biology, that would be this page).

Let us know what you think and whether or not you have any lingering concerns about the catalog.

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Email from Provost’s Office:

Public Relations received some complaints concerning the difficulty in navigating in the University’s on-line catalog (Acalog).  Some users thought it was not clear how to navigate to a department’s web site from the Acalog pages.  In response to this concern, the Office of Public Relations has added a link on program pages in the online catalog to take users back to the Department website. For example, you may view the Biology program page:

The user can get back to the Department website by clicking on the link in the sentence that reads:
“For more information about the Biology department, visit its website.”

In addition, users can always find the Department Web Site by going to the “Colleges and Departments” link from the “Academics” drop down menu at the top of the page.

We hope that this enhancement will be helpful.  Any additional feedback is always welcome.  Please direct your comments or concerns to Anne Marie Stamford (stamforda1@scranton.edu).  Thank you!

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UPDATE:  11/3/2010

The PR office has added links to departmental websites to the bottom of every “program” page in the catalog (which Teresa referenced below) – for example, see Biology’s program page with a link to their department page at the very bottom.





2010 Undergrad Catalog in PDF

28 09 2010

Just a note to say that TAG got hold of the Undergraduate Catalog in PDF format. If you prefer advising from print, you might find it useful to print out just the pages that are relevant to you and your students (departmental course offerings, your major’s curricula, etc).  We’ll post the Graduate Catalog if/when we get a copy.





Meeting Summary 9/23

23 09 2010

TAG held our second meeting yesterday at the Library. While only a few of us were able to attend, we did make some progress on a few issues.  Here’s what we came up with.

Scheduling:

  • Doodle seems to work as a scheduling tool for the TAG members who attended the meeting or shared feedback via email prior to the meeting.  We’ll continue using this tool to schedule future meetings.

Post-Survey Discussion (which also involved discussing the TAG website):

  • The survey confirmed that communication is an issue. But how do we tackle this?
  • One TAG member pointed out that 79% of survey respondents self-identified as “Innovators” or “Early Majority.”  Did we miss the not-so-techy faculty entirely? How do we gather feedback from them?  And were the self-identifications correct, or did faculty overstate their technological skill?
  • One of the clear survey results was that faculty preferred communication via email.  Jim noted that the Provost’s office is really good about releasing any emails IR needs to send out to faculty.  The tricky thing is to figure out what email people want to see – and faculty basically want to see email that is relevant to their specific needs, and that’s it.  If IR emails too frequently, faculty might start ignoring their emails.
  • One possibility for resolving the email problem – IR emails could be very short and brief (e.g., you will be affected by an outage in this specific way at this time), but include a link to “click here for more information” that would lead to a post about the outage on the TAG site.  Faculty could then comment on the post, and TAG can add more information/detail/explanation about the issue as it becomes available.  We agreed this is worth experimentation, since using analytics we’ll be able to tell whether or not faculty chose to take advantage of the link.
  • Another possibility would be to try to “train” faculty to go to the TAG website whenever they have a technical question.  But there might be confusion here, since IR is trying to “train” the University to call the Technology Support Center help line with any technology questions.
  • If we keep a running set of explanatory posts on the TAG website, we can just link to a post whenever a faculty member has a question or concern that we’ve discussed before.  This might save us time in the future.
  • Some of the survey comments indicated that there has been some miscommunication between faculty and IR.  In order to clear up these miscommunications and explain any nuances, we discussed the possibility of responding to comments with explanatory posts on the TAG site.  We need to be careful, though, not to be apologists for IR – just try to evenhandedly provide background information that can help faculty understand the complexity of the issues.

Other discussion points:

  • Communication with the Senate — We did check in with Jack Beidler, chair of the Academic Support Committee, who said that we can meet with him (or report to him via email) if/when we have concerns/information to share.
  • Catalog — Jeremy summarized the Faculty Senate’s comments about the catalog at their last meeting.  The Provost’s office will print some paper copies, which will likely resolve faculty concerns for the present.  That said, we’ve heard some feedback about the catalog that should probably be shared with the PR office or Registrar’s office.
  • Phishing – we talked briefly about one of the last phishing attacks to hit the University.  IR found out about the attack immediately, and the Information Security office blocked the site right away.  However, this doesn’t protect faculty who might be checking their email from off campus.  The big message to share with faculty is that IR will NEVER ask for personal information.

Action items:

  • SP and Sufian will do more detailed analysis of the survey results.
  • Kristen will post the PDF summary of survey results.
  • Jeremy and Kristen will sort out “top 10” major issues that came up in the survey comments.  Jim will help us come up with explanations/discussions/feedback for those comments, which we’ll post to the TAG website.
  • The next time IR has a need to communicate with faculty about a technology issue, Jim will check in with either Jeremy or Kristen. We’ll set up a TAG post to start gathering information/explanations/comments about the issue, and then IR will send out a brief email with a “click here for more info” link to the TAG post.  We’ll experiment with this style of communication and see whether the TAG post can help clear up some faculty questions and concerns.

Outstanding questions:

  • When we hear feedback about the CMS (including catalog design issues), with whom should we share it? Faculty Senate? PR?
  • How do we reach the 60% of faculty who didn’t respond to the survey?
  • Group purpose — our stated goal is “advancing, promoting, and propagating technology at the University.”  Do we need to have  more formal conversations with the Senate about what our role is?




Catalog woes?

13 09 2010

The agenda for this Friday’s Faculty Senate meeting includes a discussion of the new online catalog – it seems that some faculty members and students have had difficulty using it.  If you have had or have heard about issues with the catalog, please drop us a comment or an email and let us know so we can get a sense of what’s going on and whether or not TAG should get involved. Thanks!

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Update 9/14-16: Here’s some of the reported feedback we’ve started to gather, related to the catalog itself as well as how it’s integrated into the University website.

  • When you search the University’s website for information (such as faculty contact information), you keep getting directed to the catalog rather than a page (like the department’s home page) that actually has the information you need
  • It’s hard to find a click path to get to a departmental website.  Most of the links that you’d think would take you to a departmental page actually take you to the program page in the catalog.  Or there just aren’t links to department pages where you’d expect them to be (e.g., there’s no easily findable way to click through to a CAS department’s page from the CAS home page).
  • One of the faculty members involved in summer advising noted that the left hand menu in the catalog (its Table of Contents) is focused on PR needs as opposed to student needs (e.g., the first link is for Pride, Passion, Promise).  He further observed that the catalog information is very complete, but it’s not always intuitive to find – he had to call over to the PR office to figure out where to find the information he and his students needed.
  • Not exactly a problem, but an odd design decision – the University directory at the end of the catalog is essentially useless.  This may just be a holdover from the print edition, but what’s the point of a directory that doesn’t give you any contact information? It would make sense for names of Faculty of Instruction to be linked to email addresses, while their department names should be linked to their department’s web site.

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Update 9/23: We got hold of the Undergraduate Catalog in PDF format.





University Catalog in now in relational database form

24 06 2010

In case you missed the announcement earlier this month, the University’s Undergraduate Catalog has been moved online and is now available as a searchable relational database (as opposed to last year’s PDF format) at catalog.scranton.edu. The catalog database also includes last year’s undergraduate catalog, graduate catalog, and student handbook.  (Don’t forget that previous catalogs, all the way back to 1926, can be found in the Library’s digital collections at www.scranton.edu/library/coursecatalogs).

According to the Public Relations office, there will be an information session on campus about the new catalog format at some point.  All content changes are expected to be completed by the time Orientation begins in July.

There will be a print version of the catalog available, but in limited quantities.

Comments or questions should be addressed to Gerry Zaboski at zaboskig1@scranton.edu.