1998 Directions Statement
April 13, 1998
University Committee on Information Systems & Technology (UCIST)
University of Waterloo -- Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, N2L 3G1
Introduction
The University of Waterloo's mission is to advance learning and knowledge
through teaching, research, and scholarship, nationally and internationally,
in an environment of free inquiry and expression. Increasingly, achieving
these goals depends upon equitable access by the University community to
a powerful, well-managed electronic information infrastructure, consisting
of electronic services, information, systems, and computational resources.
Each member of the University should have the opportunity to be innovative
and creative in the application of this infrastructure to individual and
institutional goals. The University must encourage the adoption of new
technology, through standards and guidelines, and must have enough organizational
flexibility to enable this adoption, through distributed responsibility
and accountability for the acquisition, development, and use of information
technology (IT). This responsibility and accountability implies that individuals
and units will act to reinforce centrally supported systems and standards.
Individual, departmental and institutional requirements must be satisfied
in a harmonized manner. The University must provide adequate training and
support so that innovation will be successful, and individuals must ensure
they have the skills and knowledge necessary to appreciate how IT can best
serve them in their study or work. Further, individuals must help craft,
use, and work within the infrastructure in a responsible fashion that reflects
well upon themselves and the University. In return, the University must
recognize individuals' legitimate rights to freedom of expression and privacy
in our increasingly electronic workplace.
Equitable access, efficiency and effectiveness, and harmonization of
institutional and individual requirements are the three principles on which
UCIST's recommendations are based. Fulfilling UCIST's recommendations will
involve changes in attitude, reallocation of resources, and rethinking
how we do business. Many changes are underway, and significant
progress has been made. However, many significant accomplishments are
still on the horizon, and the rapid pace of technological change will continue,
independent of the University's actions. We must persist in taking timely
action on a number of fronts, and take advantage of the wealth of individuals'
knowledge, creativity, and energy to achieve our goals more effectively
and efficiently than at present.
In presenting the 1998 Directions Statement, UCIST has adopted a two-dimensional
conceptual model. One dimension corresponds to the activities involved
in the acquisition, creation, and dissemination of knowledge. The activities
are categorized into Teaching and Learning, Research,
and Administration. In the other
dimension, since information systems and technology tend to cut across
the activities similarly, we categorize the infrastructure into Technical
Infrastructure, Electronic Workplace, User
Support and Training, and Management of Infrastructure.
In each category, we present a brief description of issues and directions,
possibly including some principles that have guided our thinking.
This leads to a set of Recommendations for
action. The Directions Statement concludes with appendices that summarize
changes since the 1996
Directions Statement, progress relative to the
1996 recommendations, and supporting detail on other
relevant changes.
Teaching and Learning
We expect rapid increases in applications of IT in teaching
and learning. Thoughtful consideration and successful integration of IT
into university teaching practice will help us sustain a position of leadership.
In order to achieve success, we need to provide direction for the infrastructure
support of IT in teaching and learning, including human resources, computing
resources, and faculty incentive and recognition programs. In
this context, infrastructure includes the artifacts of IT in teaching and
learning (such as teaching classrooms and lab environments); the human
resources (both technical and conceptual) to support course preparation
and delivery; interaction with students; and, the administrative and financial
support required to initiate and successfully implement innovations in
the use of teaching and learning technologies.
In developing infrastructure, two important strategies
should be followed. First, the support infrastructure must be separated
from a specific methodology or delivery mechanism. The support infrastructure
should provide maximum flexibility for the mode and style of delivery and
also for student response and interaction. Second, development of infrastructure
should be planned and coordinated at an institutional level. This could
be facilitated by a teaching and learning innovation centre that would
provide publicity, education and promotion of new teaching and learning
technologies to teaching staff.
Professors and instructional support staff need access
to appropriate resources to make effective and efficient use of IT. These
include support for developing new teaching and learning facilities, personnel
resources to support pedagogically useful software and instructional techniques,
and help in the creation of new teaching materials. Technology support
by itself, however, forms only part of the picture. Another important part
is the recognition that cost-effective use of IT likely requires different
models for delivery of pedagogical materials. Otherwise, the development
or acquisition costs of these materials will be prohibitive. We need to
seek a balance between development of our own materials and use of those
prepared by others. We need to make use of the same material in different
contexts (e.g., on campus, distance, for-credit, continuing). We need to
reconsider the roles and responsibilities of learners, professors and teaching
staff, in light of what the technology enables.
The University needs to recognize and reward the
development and facilitate creative use of IT in teaching and learning.
While the potential in this area is widely accepted, the barrier of time
required for developing and using new materials and methods prevents their
wider acceptance and use. Foremost is the time required to learn the changing
technology, closely followed by the time required to create materials using
these systems; also, few pedagogical models exist to assist in deploying
the teaching materials. Increasing familiarity with the electronic workplace
and improved IT-based pedagogical software has reduced the barrier to the
technology. However, many faculty members are just beginning to adopt the
new tools. In coming years, faculty members will face increasing demands
to respond to the new technology-enabled opportunities to improve their
effectiveness and efficiency. An explicit program to recognize achievement
and evaluate new scholarly accomplishments in this area is required. The
University should modify its reward structure to acknowledge the effort
and potential benefits of the development of these new modes of teaching
and learning.
For learners, developing familiarity and skill in
the use of the electronic workplace makes IT a viable and sometimes preferred
vehicle for many types of interaction (teacher-student; teacher-teacher;
student-student; student-teacher). Concepts such as home-based learning,
through campus and Internet connectivity, are important considerations.
Further, the electronic workplace is not limited to the office or the lab.
It is intimately associated with the concept of the electronic classroom
and the electronic library. These resources should also be considered in
the evolution of IT teaching and learning modes.
In order for learners to make effective use of IT,
they must have appropriate and convenient access to supporting infrastructure.
For on-campus users, this means access to sufficiently powerful multimedia
hardware and software, network access, and training. For off-campus users,
this means access to the campus computing network. The promotion of student-owned
computers and the realignment of expenditures on re-equipping student labs
offers an opportunity to leverage limited resources to invest in fostering
development of IT in teaching and learning. To be successful, this development
requires an effectively integrated campus network, both from on-campus
and off-campus locations. Key issues that need to be addressed here are
software licensing, access control, security, and the provision of easy-to-install
connectivity kits that require minimal support.
Recommendations 1998.9
through 1998.12 address recognizing and rewarding
the effective use of IT in teaching and learning, developing infrastructure
support for use of IT in teaching and learning, and strengthening our strategic
role as an innovator in this area. Recommendation 1998.13
suggests the establishment of a Centre for Teaching and Learning Innovation.
The Centre should increase awareness of the possibilities that IT may provide
in enhancing the education environment, and identify key areas where IT
can effectively contribute to teaching and learning. Its mandate should
include developing faculty and staff expertise in IT-enhanced teaching
and in the production of IT-based teaching materials, the development and
dissemination of IT-based resources for faculty and student use in the
application of learning technologies, and the facilitation of collaborative
developments with other institutions and organizations. Consulting on development
of course resources would remain with the existing units, including support
for instructional design and evaluation [TRACE] and development and management
[IST].
Guiding principles identified by UCIST include:
-
Recognize and reward the effective use of IT in teaching and learning.
-
Encourage preparation of educational materials in digital format to facilitate
flexible delivery for private study, tutorials, laboratories, distance
education and classroom presentation.
-
Strengthen our strategic role in the area of innovative education in Canada,
including Distance Education.
-
Provide adequate student computing lab resources to support teaching and
learning activities.
Research
While computing needs vary widely among researchers across the University,
they may be roughly divided into three different groups (with the recognition
that an individual researcher may fit into more than one group).
General Users: Virtually all researchers need a well-provisioned
electronic workplace environment, consisting of a modern workstation or
terminal on the desktop, connected to and backed up by a network or local
server, and supported by a high-bandwidth networking infrastructure, with
associated software licensing and support. This environment alone satisfies
the computing needs of a substantial percentage of researchers.
Specialized Users: A substantial number of researchers
also require dedicated computers embedded in experimental apparatus, often
running highly specialized, locally written or proprietary software. However,
these needs are largely dictated by the nature of the experiment and apparatus,
and, other than providing assistance with networking and hardware support,
the researchers must be essentially self-supporting.
Heavy Users: A third group also requires high-performance
computers for a variety of needs, including large-scale numerical or symbolic
computation, database development or manipulation, high-quality visualization,
and software development. Key hardware capabilities not available in the
general-purpose research computing environment include: very large memory,
very large disk capacity, very large CPU throughput, specialized graphics
engines, and specialized hardware such as multiple CPUs for parallel processing,
software development, and applications.
While the distinct needs of the specialized users must, by nature, be
addressed through their own expertise and resources, the work of the general
and heavy users can be greatly facilitated through the provision of centralized
resources and/or support. For such support to be provided effectively and
economically, it is important to encourage the adoption of standard hardware
and software configurations wherever possible. However, it is more difficult
to apply such restrictions to high-performance computers, as the most cost-effective
sources of the required capabilities are often associated with new minority
architectures or new vendors.
With rare exceptions, acquisition of the specialized equipment and software
required for high-performance computing has been left to individual researchers
and groups, who seek the necessary resources from the granting councils,
Centres of Excellence, or contract funding. However, such equipment is
becoming increasingly difficult to obtain without the existence of at least
some local "seed" or "matching" money to stimulate the external donor.
The University has provided researchers with an excellent networking
environment and a considerable degree of centralized Unix support, both
through the IST/MFCF Xhier software support environment, and through IST
Unix-support personnel who were available to help and guide individual
researchers or groups in setting up managing their facilities. While the
strong network remains in place, unintended effects of the IST reorganization
over the past year or so have reduced the degree of centralized Unix support,
and to remote (non IST/MFCF) groups, even the response to Xhier requests
has substantially degraded. This support imbalance needs to be redressed.
Administration
A number of large information systems support the administrative activities
of the University, and this sector is in the midst of the most radical
changes it has seen in decades. Many changes have been initiated
recently, and it is important that the entire University community work
together to ensure that they come to fruition, recognizing that successful
implementation of such new systems in fact relies on corresponding fundamental
changes in the way we administer the University. We must balance
visions of how we might wish to "do business" with the twin realities of
our current practices and the concrete capabilities of the new systems.
Achieving this balance will consume significant resources and much emotional
energy from many of us for the next several years.
From the vantage point of today, the most important of these systems
are our implementations of Oracle Government Financials, PeopleSoft Human
Resources and Payroll, PeopleSoft Student Administration, Endeavor Voyager
library system, and the recently approved information system for Cooperative
Education and Career Services. All rely on a common infrastructure
layer and set of tools so that information can flow among them and be made
available for decision support. Important infrastructure and tool
components are the campus network, the world wide web, the Oracle relational
database management system, Cognos Impromptu for reporting and ad hoc
querying, and Cognos PowerPlay for analysis and high-level decision support.
Assuming these projects are largely successful, we will have moved into
an environment where our information systems are supporting our administrative
processes in a fashion that evolves with changes in technology and business
practices, provides appropriate information in a timely fashion, and allows
us to leverage human resources throughout the institution to provide better,
more cost-effective support to our core activities of teaching, learning,
and research.
The scope of these projects implies very significant staff commitments
from both IST and client administrative departments. IST, in particular,
has no capacity to undertake any additional initiatives, in spite of significant
pressures to do so. This will likely remain true for several years,
unless additional resources are made available to IST.
Guiding principles identified by UCIST include:
-
Ensure that administrative IS standards, approaches, and infrastructure
are consistent with the University IT standards, approaches and infrastructure,
and vice versa.
-
Commit to principles of distributed access, IS integration, and the exploitation
of generic solutions and protocols as opposed to customized approaches
or development for specific areas.
-
Ensure that IS projects are supported with appropriate commitment by both
the user groups and IT/IS service providers, that priorities are well established
through consultation, and that project feasibility, structure, methodology,
and evaluation are appropriate.
Infrastructure
Infrastructure is defined broadly to include the aspects of IT required
to support Teaching and Learning, Research, and Administration activities.
This section is divided into Technical Infrastructure, Electronic Workplace,
User Support and Training, and Management of Infrastructure. These four
areas are highly interrelated. Networks, hardware, software, and user support
are resources available as part of the infrastructure of the institution
and used to support the activities of the institution. Management of infrastructure
provides the framework by which these resources are organized and delivered
to users.
Technical Infrastructure
Technical Infrastructure includes hardware linked together by a communications
network and software applications. The technical infrastructure at the
University of Waterloo includes:
-
the campus network;
-
common mechanisms for the electronic identification and authentication
of individuals;
-
servers for a variety of purposes including e-mail, web, and business functions;
-
teaching facilities such as videoconferencing classrooms and computer-equipped
teaching labs;
-
public computing labs;
-
desktop workstations and peripherals in offices and student residences;
-
general and special-purpose software packages for University activities
including software for core business functions;
-
telephone system.
Of these, the identification and authentication infrastructure is the least
well-developed at present. Significant effort needs to be expended
on improving it in the near future if the vision of a seamless and integrated
computing environment is to be achieved.
In order to achieve equitable access and efficiency, the student computing
environment should be integrated as much as possible with the environment
used by faculty and staff members. The computing environment should include
on-campus computers, off-campus access, and connections of portable computers.
Electronic Workplace
Our work environment has evolved to become an Electronic Workplace as we
seek to enhance the way we conduct teaching, research, and administration.
This brings about a higher degree of integration of our activities as we
strive to meet the University goals of the acquisition, creation, and dissemination
of knowledge. An underlying principle of the process should be to make
new information systems and technologies accessible to all UW faculty,
staff and students, and to integrate them into the work environment in
a fashion that best meets the nature of each individual's needs and responsibilities.
Hence, the focus of the Electronic Workplace should be on the people and
not simply on the physical infrastructure. The process of change inherent
to the Electronic Workplace has implications for the work environment,
and most importantly, its quality to individuals at UW. Among the
many issues to consider are:
-
the broad array of required skills related to the integration of information
systems;
-
increased stress due to rising expectations of functionality (an issue
tied in part to training);
-
the appropriateness of the physical working environment in terms
of lighting and furniture to avoid problems such as eye strain, repetitive
strain injuries, and chronic lower back pain;
-
the appropriateness of the social working environment to avoid feelings
of isolation, loss of community, and loss of collegial interaction;
-
the appropriateness of the intellectual working environment to avoid promoting
style (i.e., what we are capable of technologically) over substance (i.e.,
what we are capable of intellectually).
While most aspects of the need for and provision of an appropriate electronic
workplace environment are discussed elsewhere in this document, one point
which remains open is the means by which research faculty who do not have
ready access to granting council funds may obtain access to a well-provisioned
desktop workstation attached to the University network. For new faculty
this may be provided by start-up funds, but this is not done uniformly.
Moreover, since such stations have an effective lifetime of at most a few
years, some regular means of renewal should also be in place. The existing
faculty Professional Allowance provides a partial means of addressing this
need, but for active faculty there are numerous other demands on such funds.
Guiding principles identified by UCIST include:
-
Coordinate resources at all levels to ensure that faculty, staff and students
have appropriate access to workstations that will facilitate their required
academic and academic-support activities in the Electronic Workplace.
-
Consult regularly with end-users, and in particular students, to ensure
their basic desktop requirements are identified and incorporated in subsequent
planning decisions.
-
Encourage a review of alternative work arrangements such as "telecommuting",
in recognition of the changing nature of the workforce (per Recommendation
26 of Building
on Accomplishment).
User Support and Training
The provision of adequate user support and training in a proactive fashion
can facilitate the effective use of technology and information systems.
Beyond the provision of formal support and training through IST, Faculty
and administrative computing offices, or others, UW must also encourage
both staff and faculty members to pursue personal development by taking
advantage of training opportunities. In a people-centred Electronic Workplace,
support and training must be relevant to the working demands and styles
of each individual. For staff members in particular, making release time
available, designing appropriate training programs, and recognizing their
participation in such programs, would facilitate personal growth and contribute
to a more effective working environment. Recommendations 1998.3
through 1998.7 suggest concrete actions to be taken in this regard.
A Guiding Principle identified by UCIST is:
-
Encourage departments and groups to adjust job responsibilities to establish
local staff expertise and thus provide a basic level of local support for
the major activities of their unit.
Management of Infrastructure
The technical infrastructure is changing rapidly as information technology
itself changes and as members of the UW community adapt to new approaches
to their work. This poses both opportunities and challenges as we attempt
to balance the needs of the individual with the support requirements that
this places on the institution. The institution needs to develop a framework
for providing the infrastructure. The framework must address the issue
of which services should be provided centrally, which services should be
provided in the local unit, and how the services should be funded. Budgetary
guidelines to provide equitable access to this infrastructure are discussed
below.
Guiding Principles identified by UCIST include:
-
Negotiate with vendors to allow the University community to obtain hardware
and software at reasonable costs.
-
Refine the list of standard hardware, operating systems, applications software
and networks to be supported by the University. We must reduce the complexity
of support caused by diversity.
-
Pursue technical opportunities and licensing frameworks to enhance off-campus
access to the electronic workplace, subject to secure identification and
authorization of the user.
Budgetary Guidelines
UCIST feels that it is imperative that departments budget annually for
the replacement of desktop workstations. Departments should spend
approximately 2% of their operating budget each year on workstations (assuming
all employees have workstations); this excludes software and support costs.
A review of the previous three years of expenditures indicates that UW
spends between 3% and 3.5% of its operating budget on computer software,
hardware, maintenance, and networks. Assuming an annual salary of
$40,000, setting aside a budget of 2% would provide $3200 every four years
which would be more than adequate to purchase a modern workstation.
Conclusions
Mindful of the three principles which guide our recommendations (i.e.,
equitable access, efficiency and effectiveness, and harmonization of institutional
and individual requirements), the recommendations below are structured
along the dimension of the infrastructure, since many of them cut across
the dimension of activities. In view of that, it is useful to provide
a brief, complementary summary of UCIST's recommendations in that other
dimension.
For teaching and learning, we are suggesting significant development
of the supporting infrastructure, construed quite broadly to include human,
physical, and technical resources, as well as changes to the formal and
informal reward systems for faculty and staff. For research, having
identified three different categories of research users of computing, we
strongly support provision of better access for general research use to
the Electronic Workplace, and support of heavy users through provision
and management of shared high-performance computing facilities. For
administration, the current major information systems efforts must continue
to be supported so that their successful implementation can provide better
support to the core activities of teaching, learning, and research.
1998 Recommendations
Technical Infrastructure
1998.1 UCIST should work to develop a campus-wide student computing
environment, integrated as much as possible with the environment used by
faculty and staff.
1998.2 Develop and implement a centralized
mechanism for identification and authentication.
User Support and Training
1998.3 Identify core computing skills
required to effectively participate in the Electronic Workplace, and develop
a program within existing Human Resources training opportunities to effectively
provide those skills. Provide faculty and staff members with release time
to permit them to take full advantage of training sessions and maintain
adequate levels of competency
1998.4 Explore and expand the opportunities available for self-directed
training through such means as instructional CDs and web-based training
materials.
1998.5 Develop a plan for training that matches a multi-layered
delivery system to group and individual needs within the context and unique
demands of their academic and academic-support units. Such a plan would
also access and co-ordinate the UW computing resources best positioned
to meet needs.
1998.6 Improve communications among all groups and individuals
involved in support and training, including IST and the Faculty and administrative
computing offices, to facilitate shared access to training opportunities
and expertise across campus.
1998.7 Develop opportunities for ongoing training of the trainers
in order to maintain their currency in emerging applications and systems,
as well as in effective methods of transferring that knowledge to the UW
community.
Management of Infrastructure
1998.8 UCIST should further develop the framework for the provision
of technical infrastructure and user support and training to balance the
needs of the individual with that of the institution. This framework should
make specific reference to the Teaching and Learning, Research, and Administrative
activities.
1998.9
Ensure recognition, in annual evaluation processes, of innovation in applying
IT in teaching and learning.
1998.10 Plan and coordinate teaching and learning infrastructure
support, such as electronic classrooms, at an institutional level in conjunction
with the development of the Electronic Workplace.
1998.11 Establish a policy for the full exploitation of IT resources
in Distance Education courses. Ensure that all new Distance Education courses
fulfill this objective, and establish a schedule for updating existing
course resources.
1998.12 Encourage the development of IT-based teaching resources,
through for example,
-
A department assignment of teaching workload time for the production of
IT-based course resources.
-
A Faculty-administered incentive fund for IT projects which significantly
improve the effectiveness and/or efficiency of teaching and learning.
-
A competitive centrally-administered incentive fund for leadership projects
which further the University's strategic role in the forefront of the application
of IT in teaching and learning.
1998.13 Establish
a University of Waterloo Centre for Teaching and Learning Innovation
as a focus for the University's leadership role in this area (consistent
with Recommendation 8 of Building
on Accomplishment).
1998.14 Secure both internal and external resources to acquire
shared high-performance computing equipment dedicated to research.
1998.15 Continue to allocate resources to provide IST support
for common research computing environments.
1998.16 Departments should allocate
approximately 2% of their operating budget each year on workstations (assuming
all employees have workstations).
Appendix A
This section provides a brief overview of changes since the 1996
Directions Statement, followed by more detailed information on progress
relative to the 1996 recommendations, and supporting detail on other
relevant changes.
A Time of Change
There have been dramatic and far-reaching changes in the general information
systems and technology environment over the last two years, since the last
Directions Statement was drafted by the University Computing Committee
(as it was then called). The UW budget has been reduced dramatically,
leading to the implementation of the Special Early Retirement Program and
attendant massive reorganization across the University. Major technical
decisions have been made and technical milestones accomplished, for which
consequences are beginning to be felt.
Reorganization has had a major impact in information systems and technology
in several ways. The new Associate
Provost, Information Systems & Technology, was appointed with an
explicit mandate to combine the three existing departments (Computing Services,
Data Processing, and Telephone Services) into a single organization. By
the Fall of 1997, the reorganization of the department, IST, was complete.
The IST department is organized
into six functional units called groups, each with well-defined areas of
technical responsibility. Strategic consultants assist academic-support
departments in articulating and achieving UW information systems and technology
goals, identifying and providing IST support to clients, and managing large
projects to achieve major shifts in information systems and technology
at a departmental or institutional level. Faculties interact with IST through
their associate deans and UCIST, and through other formal and informal
venues (e.g., CNAG, CSAG). Individuals contact IST through Client
Services and the various interfaces it has for answering questions,
processing requests, and providing information. The Associate Provost,
Information Systems & Technology (currently, Jay Black), is accountable
to the Vice-President, Academic & Provost, for the administration and
long-term planning of all information systems and information technology
at UW.
The University Committee
on Information Systems and Technology (UCIST, replacing UCC) now has
representation from both academic and academic-support departments across
campus; of its 12 members, only four had been on UCC. UCIST is advisory
to the Vice-President, Academic & Provost through the Associate Provost,
and provides a University-wide forum for the exchange of ideas and for
the consideration of questions related to information systems and technology
in all sectors of the University. The Associate Provost, IST, chairs
the Committee, whose members include the other associate provosts and the
Director of Business Operations, the six associate deans of computing,
and the Associate University Librarian for Information Services & Systems.
For essentially independent reasons, a number of important technical
milestones were achieved and directions were clarified over the same period.
The Financial Systems
Project began production use of Oracle Government Financials on May
1, 1996. Both the Human
Resources Management System Project and the Student
Information Systems Project were re-oriented towards implementations
of existing and forthcoming products from PeopleSoft.
A new telephone switch was purchased as the initial phase of a complete
telephone system
replacement, and implementation of the next-generation
campus data network has also begun. Implementation of the new
Tri-Library Group automated
library system is also underway. On the academic front, a new
version of our locally developed PC network, Waterloo
Polaris, is in production use. Many of these technical efforts
will have an impact on the community over the coming year.
While much has been accomplished since the last Directions Statement,
the accomplishments have required major commitments from many individuals
around the University, not only those directly responsible for information
systems and technology in general. UCIST is pleased to acknowledge
that dedication and commitment, much of it unrecognized.
Progress on 1996 Recommendations
1996.1 Appoint a senior person to provide leadership in IT/IS
Jay Black was appointed Associate Provost, Information Systems &
Technology, effective 1996.05.01.
1996.2 Establish a single committee, University Committee on Information
Technology and Systems (UCITS), which would be advisory to the senior manager
on all matters relating to IT/IS.
The University Committee on Information Systems & Technology (UCIST)
was formed with a broader mandate and structure than UCC had in the past,
as well as an almost completely new set of members. Of the 12 members,
only four had been on UCC (Black, Hall, Kennedy, Walker), and all except
Hall and Kennedy were in new jobs. UCIST meets biweekly.
UCIST's main activities have included acting as a forum for communication
about the Special Projects, considering various site licenses for software,
and setting strategic directions for information systems and technology.
1996.3 Develop special subcommittees and working groups to provide the
resources and expertise to address specific IT/IS issues and provide advice
to the manager and UCITS. UCITS would develop the Terms of Reference, identify
the membership, and appoint the Chair for these subcommittees and working
groups.
Most existing working groups and subcommittees have continued their
work; some new ones have been established and some have had their mandates
expanded.
1996.4 Assign management responsibility for the Department of Computing
Services, Data Processing and the Library to the senior manager (IT/IS).
Other units that should also be considered are: Telephone Services, the
Computer Store, Audio Visual and Graphic Services.
The Department of Information Systems & Technology (IST) was created
from the former departments of Computing Services, Data Processing, and
Telephone Services, effective 1996.05.01.
1996.5 Conduct a review and subsequent re-organization of IT/IS support
activities along functional lines, with an emphasis on the ability to support
user/university driven needs. This should be done in consideration of the
role of some distributed support units.
The IST reorganization began with a series of meetings of IST management
to discuss the general approach; they eventually settled on a matrix structure
of seven groups plus a number of strategic consultants. One group was subsequently
dropped (teaching and learning technology) when it became apparent IST
had insufficient resources to devote more than one full-time position to
it. Once this high-level design was set, nine working groups were commissioned
to discuss operating group structure, mandate, and mode of operation. There
was one working group per operating group, plus one each for Oracle support,
career paths and career mobility. The working groups met and reported to
the Associate Provost over the course of the summer of 1996. Among other
advantages, it was extremely useful in beginning the process of merging
DCS and DP.
Over the course of the Fall 1996 term, the Associate Provost, using
the working group reports, developed job descriptions for the six group
directors, three strategic consultants and two senior technologists positions.
These were graded and announced internally (some appointments were announced
outside IST). This happened in the last half of the Winter 1997 term, and
also involved preliminary assignment of staff to the groups. The final
phase of this restructuring is now complete, involving the management structure
within two IST groups, Systems and Production Support.
1996.6 Recognize and reward the effective use of IT in teaching and learning.
This could be via the currently enhanced attention being paid to
the teaching component of merit or via special targeted awards.
The 1998 Directions Statement recommends specific means to accomplish
this goal. See Recommendations 1998.9 and
1998.13; see also the Teaching
and Learning section.
1996.7 Foster the effective use of IT in teaching and learning, by reorganization
or coordination of parts of bodies such as TRACE, Audio Visual, and the
Library, to provide consultation, design, production and evaluation on
the integration of IT into the curriculum.
See Recommendation 1998.13; see also the Teaching
and Learning section.
1996.8 Encourage preparation of educational materials in digital format
to facilitate flexible delivery using IT for private study, tutorials,
laboratories, distance education and classroom presentation. Infrastructure
support, such as electronic classrooms, should be planned and coordinated
at an institutional level.
IST created a position called "Senior Technologist, Teaching and Learning
Technology," reporting through the Electronic Workplace group. Andrea
Chappell currently holds the position, reporting to Carol Vogt.
1996.9 Ensure that administrative IS standards, approaches, and infrastructure
are consistent with the University IT standards (see 1996.34), approaches
and infrastructure, and vice versa.
Ongoing principle.
1996.10 Commit to principles of distributed access, IS integration, and
the exploitation of generic solutions and protocols as opposed to customized
approaches or development for specific areas.
Ongoing principle.
1996.11 Ensure that IS projects are supported with appropriate commitment
by both the user groups and IT/IS service providers, that priorities are
well established through consultation, and that project feasibility, structure,
methodology, and evaluation are appropriate.
Ongoing principle.
1996.12 Develop and maintain a statement describing the base level of hardware,
software, network infrastructure, system support, and training necessary
for the electronic workplace.
Each Faculty has defined recommended standards for computers purchased
by students, and efforts are underway to develop a training program coordinated
by Human Resources and the Staff Association.
1996.13 Develop a plan for the coordination of resources at all levels
to ensure that faculty, staff and students have appropriate access to workstations
that will facilitate their required academic and academic support activities
in the electronic workplace.
Ongoing. See Recommendation 1998.16
and the Electronic Workplace and Budgetary
Guidelines Sections.
1996.14 Identify a set of core computer skills required by various user
groups and develop training programs designed to help users learn and maintain
these skills.
See 1996.13. A joint project has been initiated to define core
computing skills and provide training programs to develop these skills.
Project participants are: Staff Training and Development Committee, Human
Resources, IST's Client Services and Electronic Workplace groups, and other
UW computing support staff.
1996.15 Build on existing models for training and user support, by maintaining
a central group responsible for the development and coordination of high
quality IT/IS training programs for faculty, staff and students across
the University.
This is now the responsibility of IST Client Services and Electronic
Workplace. These two IST groups are responsible for the development and
coordination of training programs for faculty, staff and students and the
continued expansion of scheduled and on-request courses offered by IST
in a hands-on training environment (in 1996 there were 5000 registrants
in scheduled courses and 1700 registrants in on-request courses).
1996.16 Provide faculty and staff members with release time to permit them
to take full advantage of training sessions and maintain adequate levels
of competency.
This recommendation continues to be relevant; see Recommendation 1998.3.
1996.17 Expand the structure of local help desks and support to all Faculties
and major administration units. DCS/DP should provide support, coordination,
backup, professional development, and training for staff providing local
support.
Some progress as IST Client Services begins operation. For example,
Client Services has created FACCUS (FACulty Computing User Support Group),
a forum where all local support staff can meet and address common issues
and share expertise. A similar forum, the Administrative Support Group,
has also been created and provides coordination and ongoing training of
front-line support coordinators in academic support departments. In the
summer of 1997 UCIST reviewed and rationalized IST support to the Faculties
to achieve equity and meet individual Faculty requirements. Included in
this rationalization was the implementation of an ongoing training program
(through FACCUS) for co-op students working in Faculty Help Desks. The
Computing Help and Information Place (CHIP) has been established to provide
one-stop access to IST services, information and assistance. Old DP and
DCS problem tracking systems have been consolidated into a single, integrated,
on-line system [send mail to request@ist.uwaterloo.ca].
1996.18 Encourage departments and groups to adjust job responsibilities
to establish local staff expertise and thus provide a basic level of local
support for the major activities of their unit.
Ongoing principle. See also 1996.17.
1996.19 Provide well-defined information and guidelines on appropriate
use of computing, privacy and intellectual freedom issues in the electronic
workplace.
In early 1998, UCIST expanded upon the 1991 Use of Computing and Communication
Facilities Statement, sought feedback on the draft Statement from members
of the UW community, and struck a subcommittee to revise the Statement
based on the feedback received. UCIST intends to develop guidelines for
use by Associate Deans of Computing when dealing with misuse of computing
and communication facilities (e.g., a listing of offenses and associated
penalties, based on past precedents) to ensure consistent treatment across
all Faculties.
1996.20 Constitute a working group to generalize the USAG report of June
1995 to encompass PCs and Macintoshes.
USAG has been reconstituted with responsibility for all computing
platforms. No new report has been drafted, as this was subsequently deemed
unnecessary. However the responsibility for acting on recommendations such
as reducing the 'complexity of diversity' belongs to UCIST and will require
that UCIST terminate support for components of the university's information
technology which are no longer practical to support.
1996.21 Develop a university-wide policy for infrastructure provision and
support, and a charging policy for researchers and others who wish to buy
services from various service providers on campus.
Ongoing, but little progress to date. Some discussion of a charging
policy for researchers has taken place within UCIST in 1996/l997. Some
Faculties have in place their own policies but no campus-wide policy has
been formulated to date. There is no University-wide policy for infrastructure
provision.
1996.22 Design a procedure whereby UCITS, DCS, and DP can work with individual
units to develop local system support expertise.
Significant progress has been made in a number of academic and academic-support
departments. While this requires continued attention, the model seems
to be working effectively in those departments where it has been implemented.
Progress on this recommendation has been limited by the IST reorganization
and the shortage of support staff campus-wide. IST has assessed the use
of its staff in Faculty consulting offices and a program intended to train
new staff in the Faculty consulting offices was initiated in the fall of
1997.
1996.23 Provide all students with equitable on-campus access to the Electronic
Workplace. Users may be charged for activities which result in direct costs
to the University such as printing and dial-in access to the campus network.
Ongoing. The lack of sufficient resources dedicated to the provision
of computing facilities has created inequities across campus and remains
largely unaddressed. Progress in providing for increased access for students
in residences has been initiated by wiring approximately 600 of the Village
I residence rooms so that students who own computers can access the campus
network. Plans have been initiated to wire the remaining Village 1 and
Ron Eydt residence rooms and if feasible the Columbia townhouses, Married
Students' Apartments, and the federated and affiliated colleges residences.
The issue here is a management/political one whereby certain Faculties
and administration units have not allocated sufficient resources to the
provision of computing facilities.
1996.24 Provide adequate student computing lab resources to support teaching/learning
activities. This requires a program for ongoing upgrades to hardware and
software.
Ongoing. Once again, this is a management/political issue
whereby certain Faculties and administrative units have not allocated sufficient
resources to the provision of computing facilities. This has created inequities
across campus and remains largely unaddressed.
1996.25 Investigate the feasibility of an integrated, campus-wide student
computing environment which is accessible from both on-campus and off-campus.
Ongoing. UCIST established an ad hoc working group to investigate
the feasibility of Windows NT server as the basis for the general student
computing environment. The working group concluded that Windows NT server
would require considerable development before it could satisfy the requirements
for the student computing environment. UCIST has recognized both Windows
NT server and Waterloo Polaris as supported platforms on campus and IST
is supporting development of Waterloo Polaris as the student computing
environment in the near future. CSAG has begun deliberations to define
the necessary architecture for an integrated, campus-wide student computing
environment. Engineering Computing has just released a "Discussion Paper"
on the evolution of Waterloo Polaris towards open systems.
1996.26 Negotiate with vendors to allow the University community to obtain
hardware and software at reasonable costs.
Ongoing. Significant site licenses have been negotiated this
year with Autodesk, Microsoft, and ESRI, to name only a few.
1996.27 Develop an overall policy for campus network, software and data
security. Once a policy is in place, a plan should be made to improve the
general level of security across campus considering the available technology,
resources, and risks.
Ongoing. See Recommendation 1998.2.
1996.28 Establish a working group and forum to review and coordinate IT/IS
security.
Done, although the group has yet to complete its report.
1996.29 Assign staff to effectively monitor ongoing security procedures,
both internally and externally, and to identify, assess and correct/eliminate
new security risks.
Done. The "Senior Technologist, Security" position was created within
IST, and Reg Quinton took up the position in January, 1998.
1996.30 Establish a security awareness program for all staff and students
with access to campus IT/IS facilities, as part of the general training
effort.
Ongoing.
1996.31 Continue the operation of the Computing Network Advisory Group
to act as the focal point for network evaluation and planning, making recommendations
to UCITS to define operation policies and future planning.
Done.
1996.32 Review the second-level networks and develop an upgrade plan to
provide consistent service with appropriate bandwidth to all areas using
fibre optic technology. Those areas with the highest demands should have
first priority.
More or less complete. The recent Canada-Ontario Infrastructure
Works program has allowed us to undertake a massive replacement of core
and second-level network devices and cabling over the current year.
This is the next-generation
campus data network plan. The technologies to enable the next-generation
campus network will centre around transmission-layer and network-layer
integration comprising Fast Ethernet and Gigabit Ethernet switching with
IP routing, IP multicast, and IP bandwidth reservation and quality-of service
delivery mechanisms. The technologies will extend to include IP address-assignment
control, network-port user authentication, and applications software for
IP Web-based electronic commerce, for voice-over-IP computer-telephony
integration, and for video-over-IP desktop videoconferencing and distance
education
1996.33 Examine the potential use of network technology for integration
of all communication needs (video, phone, data) on-campus and possibly
with key university partners.
IST has appointed Bruce Uttley to the position of Senior Technologist,
Computer-Telephone Integration. As part of the telephone system replacement
project, these aspects were investigated thoroughly, and migration in this
direction will not occur for some time, although both our data and voice
equipment and networks are now positioned for this evolution. See also
the next-generation campus
data network plan.
1996.34 Refine the list of standard hardware, operating systems, applications
software and networks to be supported by the University. Maintenance of
this list should be the responsibility of UCITS and its working groups,
in consultation with the user community.
Ongoing. In early 1998, UCIST released Macintosh
Directions and Support.
Other Important Changes
Financial
Systems Project (FSP)
The new Oracle Government Financials system went live on May 1, 1996,
and has functioned satisfactorily, although a number of problems remain
to be addressed. There continues to be ongoing implementation effort in
the FSP that will continue into the foreseeable future.
Perhaps the most significant other accomplishment in the FSP has been
our successful negotiation of a site license and first use of Cognos' Impromptu
and PowerPlay tools, which should provide many people on campus with vastly
superior reporting and analysis tools. Impromptu is currently providing
important information to core offices, and prototype projects in Plant
Operations, ICR, and Optometry are underway. A data warehouse is being
implemented to support their use, and the use of these tools will be expanded
across campus in the coming year.
Human
Resources Management Systems Project/Student
Information Systems Project
It became clear in June 1996 that Oracle was not able to honour its
beta partnership agreement with us in a timeframe we would find acceptable.
This provided us with the opportunity to adopt an alternative solution
-- PeopleSoft. This project is on track for parallel payroll operation
and then payroll cutover by the end of 1998. It will imply some dramatic
changes to our approach to human resources, not only within the HR department,
but around campus.
The switch in the HR direction brought with it an even more important
opportunity -- that of acquiring PeopleSoft's new Student Administration
System. This is a major improvement in the feasibility of completely renovating
our student information systems over the next several years. An expanded
project team has been put in place, and activity on this project will be
increasing significantly during the next year.
Tri-University
Group Library System Project
UW is one of the three participants in the Tri-University Group of Libraries,
with Wilfrid Laurier University and the University of Guelph. The purchase
of the Endeavor Voyager system has been completed, and implementation has
begun. Production use is anticipated in April 1998.
Telephone
System Project
A project has begun to replace our old telephone switch and handsets
over a period of about 18 months (and three financial years). This will
position us to take advantage of current and future developments in telephony,
as well as the expected convergence between the voice and data networks
over the next several years.
Business
1999
This project was carried out in order to have a complete inventory and
set of contingency plans for how UW business would be carried out to ensure
we had no major remaining risks due to the well-known "Year 2000" effects
in older software. It appears that the risks are now identified and well
understood, and progress is being made to resolve all remaining issues.
Waterloo Polaris
Waterloo Polaris is the local area network of PC workstations that provides
the computing environment for the majority of undergraduate students at
UW. It also serves the administrative and academic-support needs of many
faculty members and staff members in the Faculties of Engineering, Science
and Arts. Waterloo Polaris made its debut in the fall of 1997, replacing
the Watstar PC network. Watstar has served the Faculty of Engineering since
1984 and has grown into one of the largest campus microcomputer networks
in North America with more than 1800 workstations and over 15000 active
user accounts. Waterloo Polaris builds on the existing infrastructure developed
by the Watstar network.
[Back to the text.]
Jay Black, 1998.04.13