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Some highlights of the Process and Politics: IT Governance in Higher Education ECAR Study

Some highlights of the Process and Politics: IT Governance in Higher Education ECAR Study. Presented by Judy Borreson Caruso Information Technology Council UW-Madison September 19, 2008. Study on Governance in HE. EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research

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Some highlights of the Process and Politics: IT Governance in Higher Education ECAR Study

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  1. Some highlights of the Process and Politics: IT Governance in Higher Education ECAR Study Presented by Judy Borreson Caruso Information Technology Council UW-Madison September 19, 2008

  2. Study on Governance in HE • EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research • 438 CIO respondents (Carnegie: 106 Doctoral, 129 Masters) • 216 Executives (non-IT) • June 2007

  3. Definition of IT Governance • “Specifying the decision rights and accountability framework to encourage desirable behavior in using IT” (Peter Weill and Jeanne Ross – MIT) • Who: • makes which decisions • provides inputs and analyzes the issues • sets priorities • settles disputes

  4. Framework: Good governance processes • Actively designed • Well understood • Fosters timely decisions • Results in behavior that is aligned with and helps achieve strategic goals

  5. Study focused on • Maturity of IT governance in HE • Roles in IT governance • Committees and processes • IT alignment with institutional goals • IT governance effectiveness

  6. Maturity

  7. IT alignment by IT maturity 1= strongly disagree, 2=disagree, 3=neutral, 4=agree, 5=strongly agree

  8. Participation in governance committees/processes

  9. Effectiveness of IT governance 1=strongly disagree, 2=disagree, 3=neutral, 4=agree, 5=strongly agree

  10. Factors associated with higher agreement about ITG effectiveness • Active design of IT governance • Perceived ability of key ITG participants to describe ITG accurately • Higher overall mean participation in providing input and taking part in decision making • Incorporation of measurement and review in IT governance • ITG involvement in formal project review and approval • ITG participation in institutional budgetary processes

  11. At my institution, IT governance… 1=strongly disagree, 2=disagree, 3=neutral, 4=agree, 5=strongly agree

  12. What does this mean? • Most respondents agree – ITG process results in timely decisions, balance instn/local needs, is effective • Conclusion, institutions should fortify IT governance: • Politics, decisions are complex • Active design of IT governance/understood • ITG participation in IT performance measurement, budgeting and projects

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