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EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research Research Bulletin, 2009
Description/Abstract The iSchool is creating a program to educate and train a new breed of information professional. The program will focus on using current information infrastructure as it emerges. It will teach students to excel in the" three I's"-information, infrastructure, and improvisation. Such a program must also provide students with the research skills they require to discover the needs of information users and how to adapt available technology to satisfy those needs.
Bulletin of Science, …, 2001
2003
Academic technology: The convergence of diverse disciplines Academic technology encompasses many disciplines and professional fields. While this diversity can lead to an exciting variety of perspectives, it can also produce conflicts in philosophy and differences in terminology. This article examines the major professions and organizations associated with academic technology in higher education. Colleges and universities seek to maintain and improve support services while faced with increasing demands for technology expertise. Understanding the convergence of diverse disciplines related to academic technology and the cross-purposes among their professional organizations might help avoid "turf wars" and lead to fruitful opportunities, partnerships and increasingly important collaborative ventures. eople come to academic technology from a broad range of disciplines and professional areas. While this diversity can lead to an exciting variety of perspectives, it can also cause frustration when people are faced with conflicts in philosophy and differences in terminology. Academic technology administrators as a professional group are not well defined or distinctly bound. In order to provide an understanding of this applied field, this article examines the professional areas and well-known organizations associated with academic technology in higher education. This article begins by defining the fields associated with academic technology. Following is a review of the professional fields of library and information science, information technology, and instructional technology. The next section explores the wellknown academic technology organizations. Finally, the article ends with a brief overview of the cooperation and competition among the professional fields and organizations.
In February 2009, a joint workshop of the EDUCAUSE Advanced Core Technologies Initiative Campus Cyberinfrastructure Working Group (ACTI-CCI) and the Coalition for Academic Scientific Computation (CASC) issued a report and recommendations that addressed the challenges and strategies for developing a coherent cyberinfrastructure from local campus to national facilities. The report concluded that it is not only practical but also optimal to solve a large number of computational problems at the campus level.The joint report immediately preceded the formation of six task forces by the NSF-wide Advisory Committee for Cyberinfrastructure (ACCI), which were charged with investigating long-term cyberinfrastructure issues. This white paper is a broad-based response to the findings of the ACCI Task Forces from the campus perspective. ACTI-CCI aims to provide the higher education community with a thorough and thoughtful reflection on each of the six ACCI reports and an analysis of the role of c...
Practice and Experience in Advanced Research Computing
Despite the fact that advanced cyberinfrastructure (CI) resources are now essential for all research and education domains, there is a large disparity in CI resources and engagement between large, research-focused (R1) universities and under-resourced 2-or 4-year institutions. The Building Research Innovations in Community Colleges (BRICCs) community was established to foster communication and collaboration between CI administrators and providers, researchers, and educational professionals across all levels to address inequities in CI accessibility and research. To that end, BRICCs held its second annual workshop in August 2022 with the goal of identifying common hurdles, limitations, and bottlenecks faced by
In support of the University of Minnesota’s goal to become one of the top three public research universities, the Research Cyberinfrastructure Alliance (RCA) was developed with the vision of facilitating access to state-of-the-art research computing systems and services, enhancing interdisciplinary research, and allowing researchers to explore radically new concepts, approaches, and tools. Founding members of the University’s RCA included individuals from college-level research computing units, the Minnesota Supercomputing Institute, and key leaders from the University’s Office of Information Technology (OIT), the Office of the Vice President for Research (OVPR), and the University Libraries. A key step for the RCA was to understand campus e-science needs and identify the challenges of engaging with relevant research computing resources and support. As a project of the 2009 President’s Emerging Leaders (PEL) program, our five member team of interdepartmental university staff was commissioned by the RCA to help lead this effort and recommend ways that the RCA university partners might respond. In 2009 our team conducted an extensive user-needs assessment of 780 university faculty, research staff, and graduate students. The PEL survey assessed the current and future cyberinfrastructure needs in the following areas: data storage, data management, and networking infrastructure; collaboration with other researchers; tools and applications; high performance computing; and learning and workforce development. The results of our PEL survey reflect a general need for e-science support and training that may affirm and further explain what other science and technology libraries are observing. Our formal recommendations and the resulting strategies toward implementing cyberinfrastructure for 21st century research will be described with emphasis on the opportunities and future roles that university libraries have in this campus-wide partnership.
EDUCAUSE is a nonprofit association and the foremost community of IT leaders and professionals committed to advancing higher education. EDUCAUSE programs and services are focused on analysis, advocacy, community building, professional development, and knowledge creation because IT plays a transformative role in higher education. EDUCAUSE supports those who lead, manage, and use information technology through a comprehensive range of resources and activities. For more information, visit www.educause.edu. The Coalition for Academic Scientific Computation (CASC) is an educational nonprofit organization with 57 member institutions representing many of the nation's most forwardthinking universities and computing centers. CASC is dedicated to advocating the use of the most advanced computing technology to accelerate scientific discovery for national competitiveness, global security, and economic success, as well as develop a diverse and well prepared 21st century workforce. For more information, visit www.casc.org.
Brown Faculty Bulletin, 2014
Brown University, being a small university was able to punch well above its weight This short paper singles out one cross-disciplinary institute at Brown that may not leap to mind when thinking about these fruitful years, but which has had an outreach well beyond the Brown Campus. It was my privilege to head up the Office of Program Analysis at the Institute for Research in Information and Scholarship (IRIS) in the 1980s. In 1984 as IRIS was being organized, then Provost Maurice Glicksman with uncanny vision felt that this new Institute, devoted to research in computing and information technology in higher education, needed a social science branch. This unit within IRIS would be charged to assess the effects of digital technology as it was gradually introduced to higher education. In 1984 only 25% of the senior class at Brown claimed to have any experience with computers or computing. In the same year, 100% of the freshman class claimed to have had some computing experience. IRIS developed the first hypertext program for use in the classroom. Our office was charged with studying its effects. This short paper provides the outcome for this research effort
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