1 / 29

A Federated Model of Computing Support at a Large State University

A Federated Model of Computing Support at a Large State University. Maurice Leatherbury Senior Director of Academic Computing and Assistant to the Associate Vice President for Computing and Communications Services University of North Texas. “Federated”.

palila
Download Presentation

A Federated Model of Computing Support at a Large State University

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Federated Model of Computing Support at a Large State University Maurice Leatherbury Senior Director of Academic Computing and Assistant to the Associate Vice President for Computing and Communications Services University of North Texas

  2. “Federated” • Federal – “of or constituting a form of government in which power is distributed between a central authority and a number of constituent territorial units” • “Formed by a compact between political units that surrender their individual sovereignty to a central authority but retain limited residuary powers of government”

  3. UNT Background • 27,500 students • Fourth largest in Texas • 9,000 desktop computers • Gigabit fiber backbone, 10/100Mbps Ethernet throughout • DS-3’s to both I1 and I2 • Netware, Windows NT, Sun Solaris, Linux, OS/390, Apple OS’es supported

  4. Computing Support Structure • Computing Center – 160 FTE’s • Administrative Computing • Academic Computing • Mainframe Technical Services • Networking and Communications Services (datacomm, telecomm) • Each of eight colleges/schools plus major administrative units has its own LAN/desktop support personnel • About 45 FTE employees • Microcomputer Maintenance Shop builds and supports desktop computers, sells and maintains Dell laptops • Classroom Support Services provisions classrooms with data projectors, VCR’s, etc. and maintains them

  5. Computing Governance • Computing Center reports to Vice President for Business and Fiscal Affairs • Information Resource Council represents all colleges and schools as well as major administrative areas (administration, budget, etc.) • Major policies and computing decision recommendations come from the IRC • Information Resources Steering Committee (the President and Vice Presidents) make final decisions or recommendations to Board • General Access Lab Committee represents 13 computer labs that are funded through student fees, makes policy and sets lab budgets from a student technology fee • General Access Lab Managers Committee composed of lab managers • Distributed Computing Support Management Team composed of managers of major desktop support units on campus (i.e., excludes CC administrative and academic units)

  6. Funding Model • Computing Center gets capital equipment funding from HEAF “off the top,” salaries and operating from M&O • Distributed units get equipment/software funding from HEAF through VPAA’s allocation to the colleges and schools (computing needs compete with other capital equipment needs such as research equipment) • Distributed units’ personnel and operating costs come from general college/department funds • Computing Center pays for many central functions: • Novell Netware • Microsoft Campus Agreement • Remedy Call Tracking • SAS and SPSS licenses • Sun hardware and software maintenance • Data communications (no chargeback)

  7. Brief History • February, 1996 the IRC formed Ad Hoc Committee on Distributed Support Issues because of problems with support across campus • Charged it to study: • Organization, training, career development, cross training of distributed support staff • Server consolidation • Software tools to facilitate network administration • Consider formal coordination of decentralized computing units • Develop guidelines or standards for computer support staffing levels

  8. Brief History (con’t) • July 1996 Provost established Distributed Computing Support Management Team (DCSMT) • Membership from all major desktop support units on campus (colleges, administrative offices, etc.) • Chair is Director of Academic Computing, who also advises colleges and administrative units on hiring and evaluation of support personnel • Ad Hoc Committee established “CSQ” (Computing Support Quotient) goal of 100 support units {(users + machines)/2} per support person • Range of CSQ was 44 (Library) to 275 (Physical Plant.) Average was 140 • Faculty Senate passed resolution requesting additional staffing in computing support

  9. Additional Staffing • 11.75 new positions were added • Majority went to colleges/schools • Three positions were upgraded to provide equity among units • $351,000 new funding, 75% first year, 50% subsequent years provided by VPAA

  10. Current CSQ

  11. Computing Support Salaries

  12. Distributed Computing Support Management Team • On the Web at http://www.unt.edu/dcsmt • 22 members, including the computing support manager at UNT’s System Center in south Dallas • Chaired by Director of Academic Computing • Meets every 1st and 3rd Friday of the month (System Center participates via videoconference) • Additional persons usually attend: CC security coordinator, Assoc VP for Computing and Communications Services, campus-wide networking support personnel, etc.

  13. DCSMT Functions • Coordinate efforts of central and distributed computer support units for efficiency and effectiveness • Improve distributed computing environment • Implement recommendations of Ad Hoc committee on computing support

  14. DCSMT’s Relationship to Other Computing Groups • Chair of DCSMT reports on its activities to the IRC • DCSMT recommends policies and procedures to the IRC (it DOES NOT make policy!) • Many DCSMT members are also members of the General Access Lab Managers Committee • Most colleges/schools have technology committees with DCSMT members participating

  15. Major DCSMT Initiatives • Campus-wide call tracking system (Remedy) • Desktop OS standardization (Windows 98, NT) • Laptop computer standardization (Dell) • Productivity suite standardization (MS Office, some Corel Wordperfect) • Virus checking standardization (McAfee) • PDA support (Palm OS)

  16. Major DCSMT Initiatives (con’t) • Students in the Novell tree • Network management tools (Managewise, DSExpert) • Y2K readiness • Hourly worker wage study • CSS/CSM classifications minimum requirements change

  17. Major DCSMT Accomplishments • Communication! (CC to distributed units) • Communication! (Distributed units to CC) • Communication! (Distributed units to distributed units) • Communication! (Computing support to campus in general) • Most DCSMT meetings end with status reports from each attendee, discussing problems, solutions, etc.

  18. Computing Center Fund campus-wide software (MS Campus Agreement, Remedy, etc.) NDS tree, Active Directory coordination Data communications funding and maintenance Help Desk for students, administrative computing questions, general computing questions Compaq server maintenance Administrative systems Central planning (DIR, etc.) Security planning & coordination Distributed Units Fund local hardware and software Support all of their users’ computing needs except for administrative systems Help desk for their users’ questions Conform to campus standards (datacomm, NDS, security, etc.) Distribution of Responsibilities

  19. What Makes the Model Work? • Standardization • Desktop computers, LAN servers, Laptops, Novell, Microsoft, Etc. • Funding • Computing Center supports campus-wide initiatives, has “carrot” to gain acceptance • Distributed units have enough to meet most computing needs • Staffing • Generally adequate to provide desktop support • Cooperation • Partnership between central computing and distributed computing

  20. EL PASO COMMUNITY COLLEGE SCT BANNER 2000 INTEGRATED ADMINISTRATIVE SOFTWARE SYSTEM EVALUATION AND SELECTION

  21. Integrated Administrative Software System Evaluation and Selection Process • May 1996 - ORACLE DBMS purchased • June 1996 - IASS Committee Formed • July 1996 - Jan 1997 - IASS RFP drafted • Feb - April 1997 - RFP issued for consultant to review IASS RFP • Sept - Nov 1997 - Consultant selected and review of IASS RFP completed • Dec 1997 - Feb 1998 - IASS RFP draft finalized • March- May 1998 - IASS RFP issued & evaluated • June - August 1998 - on-site demos

  22. Integrated Administrative Software System Evaluation and Selection Process • Oct - Dec 1998 - Software Evaluation Team, 11 members; 2 Vendors Evaluated with Four Offsite Visits • Jan - March 1999 - Vendor Negotiations • March 1999 - SCT Banner 2000 approved by Board of Trustees • May 1999 - Kickoff & Business Process Analysis • Dec 2000 - Finance Module Go-Live • March - June 2001 - Finaid & Student Go-live • Jan 2002 - H/R Go-live

  23. Integrated Administrative Software System Evaluation Criteria • Weighted scores by criticality • General System • Admissions • Registrar/Records - Credit and CE • Financial Aid • Financial System • H/R • Technology • Vendor • Other - WEB, Reporting, Support

  24. Integrated Administrative Software System SCT BANNER Selection • Price • State of Texas/DIR • TX Connection Consortium • Functionality - General, Student, Financial Aid, A/R, Tuitions, G/L & Accounting • WEB & V/R functionality • Technology • Less Strong in H/R and Purchasing

  25. SCT BANNER ImplementationTIPS • Budget - doubled estimated implementation hours, overtime and part-time, departmental equipment (PCs, monitors, network printers), materials duplication, licensing, servers and network equipment, upgrades, Summit & evaluation trips • Site evaluations - Pick sites that are on same version if possible • Training - Dedicated training rooms, Train the Trainer, Internal training documentation, smaller training areas • No Base Line Modifications

  26. SCT BANNER ImplementationTIPS • Business Process Analysis - EPCC ready/SCT not, Change processes not system • Project Management - Internal Full time, external part time, Change Management is key • Staffing - backfill key positions, develop vacation accrual policies • Project Management Team - Senior Management Level including Functional Team Chairs • Functional Teams - Chaired by Director level or above, users assume ownership • Document & record all meeting and decisions

  27. SCT BANNER ImplementationTIPS • Functional - Cumbersome maintenance; Approval Queues, User profiles, Security Matrix, etc • Integrated General Person - Triple Caution • Reporting - State Reports solution in progress, canned reporting not great, ODBC reporting has security and performance issues, Get Help!! • Technical - Licensing, Training & Hands on, Staff Retention, multiple Servers needed, installations, PC’s, network printers, • Extras - A/R Cashier system, Counseling and Testing MS ACCESS system, Payment server

  28. SCT BANNER ImplementationEPCC Status • On track overall • Outstanding issues - Reporting, Internal Training, Departmental Equipment, Banner Installations, Credit Card Payment • Vendor Support Good overall

  29. Banner General GEAR UP FOR BOOT CAMP!!

More Related