1 / 34

President’s Report to the Faculty

President’s Report to the Faculty. January 8, 2009. Key Report Issues. 2008 Critical Success Factors 2009 External Environment Enrollment Profile Budget and Impact of the Recession Strategic Thinking Technology Initiatives Facilities Improvements. 2008 Trinity Critical Success Factors.

pia
Download Presentation

President’s Report to the Faculty

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. President’s Report to the Faculty January 8, 2009

  2. Key Report Issues • 2008 Critical Success Factors • 2009 External Environment • Enrollment Profile • Budget and Impact of the Recession • Strategic Thinking • Technology Initiatives • Facilities Improvements

  3. 2008 Trinity Critical Success Factors • Enrollment: increased to 1756 • Improved Retention, New Programs • New Program Success Stories • Nursing • Criminal Justice • CAS General Education Program • Faculty and Staff Achievements 2007-2008 • Budget: FY08 Operations end in the black • Audit: smooth process, good comments • Technology Improvements • Facilities Improvements

  4. 2009 Operating Environment • Presidential & Political Transition • Deep Global Recession • Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan • Gaza Crisis • Ongoing Terrorism Threats • US Banking and Credit Crisis • Wachovia/Wells Fargo Merger • Washington Region Relative Economic Stability • Higher Education Relative Economic Stability • D.C. Public Schools Ongoing Drama • Capital Availability Slowdown

  5. Snapshot of Fall 08 Enrollment

  6. CURRENT ENROLLMENTS: FALL 2000 FALL 2008 HEADCOUNTS Showing Budget Projections for Spring 09 1756 1645 1640 1637 1659 1618 1605 1565 1519 1315 1327

  7. Trinity Enrollments Showing Credit VolumeFall and Spring Enrollments, Fall 01 to FALL 2008 17,514 15,522 15,185 15,493 15,851 15,359 15,647 15,345 14,797 16,118 15,637 14,425 14,645 12,395 11,947

  8. Financial Analysis

  9. Key Positives in Fiscal Profile • Strong budget management • Disciplined internal spending environment • Carefully targeted capital projects • Clean audits • Meeting debt covenants • Expectations for returns on each initiative • Pro-active risk management practices

  10. Major Challenges in Fiscal Profile • REVENUE GENERATION • Economic climate • Banking climate/Credit Climate • Escalating construction costs • Expense of rapid changes in technological environment for higher education • Pushback on tuition prices • Charitable Giving Decline

  11. GROSS REVENUE/EXPENSE ACTUALS FISCAL 2006,2007,2008 27.1 27.1 26.3 26.1 26.1 25.8 EXPENSES REVENUES

  12. FISCAL 2009 TRINITY BUDGET REVENUE SOURCES

  13. What Are Trinity’s Expenses? On the expense side of the ledger, for every dollar Trinity spends here’s how the money is allocated… 57 cents = Salaries and Benefits for Trinity’s Faculty and Staff 15 cents = Facilities including utilities 5 cents = SECURITY 3 cents = Technology 3 cents = Insurance, Legal, Audit 3 cents = Printing and Postage 3 cents = Food Service 2 cents = Bad Debt 2 cents = Advertising 1 cent = Campus Shuttle 1 cents = Library 5 cents = Everything Else

  14. Strategic Thinking

  15. STRATEGIC PLANNING DESIGN For the full Strategic Plan “Achieving Trinity 2010” please visit the website CURRENT STRATEGIC FINANCIAL ANALYSIS (Goal 2) NEW STRATEGIC ENROLLMENT GOALS (Goal 1) BASELINE 5-YEAR FINANCIAL MODEL (Goal 2) CAPITAL CAMPAIGN PLAN (Goal 2) Enrollment Drivers Financial Drivers PROGRAMS (Goal 3) TECHNOLOGY (Goal 4) PEOPLE CAPACITY (Goals 5-6) SERVICE REPUTATION INTELLECTUAL OUTPUT (Goals 7-8-9) FACILITIES (Goal 10)

  16. Strategic Progress: Enrollment • Enrollment @ 1756 is progress, but need faster growth to reach goal of 3000 more quickly • Continuing investment in high growth subject areas is essential for more rapid enrollment progress, including • Health Professions • Criminal Justice, Homeland Security, Law Enforcement, Forensics • Psychology fields – Social Work, Counseling • Teacher Education outside of DC • Applied Communications – Journalism, Web Design, Technological Fields for Communications • Investments in facilities and technology are essential to ensure academic capacity to increase enrollmnet

  17. Strategic Progress: Technology • Technology is fast becoming one of the key drivers or inhibitors of Trinity’s ability to open new markets through effective new programs. Therefore, in 2008-2009 Trinity is planning and implementing significant infrastructure upgrades that provide the platform for more rapid transformation of academic programs for enrollment growth, such as: • Replacing all servers and switches to ensure network capacity • Phased replacements of desktop and classroom hardware • Replacing online delivery software (driven by a change in the SCT software) to adopt a new platform for online and web-enhanced courses • Creation of new course products sufficient to meet online enrollment goals • Training of faculty and staff for new course management system and expanded ability to deliver entire courses and programs online • As a result of February 2009 national conversion to all-digital television, acquisition of software and hardware necessary to bring cable television capacity to Trinity’s campus

  18. Beyond improving today’s academic functionality, technology is becoming THE key issue we must consider in the design and functionality of any new academic facilities…The ways in which technology influences instruction in all fields, particularly the sciences, in communications, in library and research, all require Trinity to rethink how physical space design interfaces with technological platforms. Technology also drives capacity --- how many students will we teach on campus, how many online, how does this affect planning capital improvements?

  19. Trinity Technology Environment

  20. POWERFAIDS: FINANCIAL AID SHIFT 4 ONLINE PYMT SERENA COLLAGE SCT SUPPORT GREAT PLAINS: ACCOUNTING IQ WEB: PUBLIC INTERFACE W/ POWER CAMPUS WEBMASTER POWERCAMPUS: STUDENT INFORMATION MANAGEMENT ENROLLMENT SERVICES WEBSITE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS ALUMNAE/DEVEL GIFT RECORDS ETHINK SUPPORT STUDENT EMAIL PHONES COURSE MGT MOODLE BLACKBOARD ACADEMIC TECH COMMUNICATIONS EMAIL TELEPHONY FACULTY DEVELOPMENT FOR TECH TRINITY TECHNOLOGY ELEMENTS DIGITAL MEDIA LAB AND PROGRAM TRINITY TECH SVCS LIBRARY ALADIN WRLC 30 DATABASES HARDWARE DESKTOPS LABS CABLES WIRELESS ETC OTHER ACADEMIIC SOFTWARE INTERNET ACCESS AND INTERNET USES SMARTHINKING LAPTOPS PDAS CABLE TELEVISION IPTV ACADEMIC SUPPORT CLASSROOM TECHNOLOGY

  21. Technology Services Environment Network Management Data Management Telecommunications Management Hardware & Stuff Management • Servers • Software • Trouble Calls • System Monitoring • Security • PowerCampus • IQ Web • Student Database • Alumni Database • Admissions • Enrollment Services • Business Office • Human Resources • Telephones • Voicemail • Email • Website • Servers • Cables • Wireless Routers • Desktop computers • Printers • Laptops • PDA’s • Facilities Interface User Support and Training Project Management Academic Technology Management Executive Management: Vendors, Budget, Personnel, Planning • Help Desk • Ticket Response Plan • Credentials • New computer config • New Employees • General training • Specialized training • Upgrade Planning • Conversions and • Schedule for new • Installations • Teaming with other • offices on specific • projects • Service and support to • classrooms, labs, faculty, • library, etc. • Participation in management • Of software and services for • Online and web enhanced • Instruction • Installation and management • of specialized software • Manage all personnel • In Tech Services • Manage vendor contracts • And asses service quality • Manage IT budget • Keep Trinity CEO and • management • Informed of industry • Developments • Strategic IT Plan and participate • in institutional planning

  22. PowerCampus UPGRADE PowerCampus Implementation And related Data Conversion Network Created APTRON CAMPUS SYSTEM MOODLE Adopted IQ WEB COURSE MGT Library gets $50,000 grant to create online catalog USE OF CUA SYSTEM VIA COUPLERS, EARLY COMPUTER COURSES IN FORTRAN, BASIC, DATA MANAGEMENT TRINITYONLINE CREATED AND IMPLEMENTED Small Blackboard Platform Adopted Early Online Courses Developed Marilley Classroom CABLE TV AOL/PT3/DOL GRANTS SMART ROOMS Prehistoric 1980’s 1990s 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Website created Website Redesigned Website CMS Phone System Conversion New Admissions Web Portal Online Donations Trinity Technology Initiatives Timeline Microsoft Platform Outlook Email Online Admissions Application Alumnae Website Groupwise Email First email via Bulletin Board

  23. Dawn of Moodle

  24. What is Moodle? • Moodle is an open source learning management system • Moodle is software that makes it possible to expand the use of technology-enhanced pedagogy and online learning • Moodle is becoming widely accepted in higher education as an alternative to Blackboard

  25. Who uses Moodle?

  26. Why do we need Moodle? • SCT/Sungard upgrade PowerCampus, changes public interface • IQ Web will continue to be the name for new public interface for registration and student information management (SCT calls this new product “self-service” but we’re keeping the older name) • Since the software upgrade would require entirely new course management software anyway, we decided that this was the best time to adopt a more robust online platform to support expanded use of technology in classroom based courses, to expand hybrid courses, and to make it possible to take some programs completely into the online delivery format.

  27. Moodle Project Objectives • Faculty Training: by Fall 2009 ALL faculty will be using Moodle for course management • Improved Pedagogy with Technology: By Fall 2009, professional development program will include faculty learning objectives at basic-advanced-proficient levels for use of tech tools in pedagogy • Expanded opportunities for hybrid courses: By Spring 2010 a significant percentage (yet to be determined) of graduate-level courses will deliver in the hybrid format • Online Programs: by Fall 2009, Trinity will launch its first entirely online program (RN to MSN)

  28. Multiple Delivery Platforms

  29. Project Columbus: Setting Sail for the New World!

  30. The instructional content, curricula, majors PROGRAM Library and research in support of academic curricula Student Information System Other Information Systems The use of technology for instructional purposes including delivery systems PEDAGOGY INFORMATION TRINITYONLINE …business unit through which Trinity will deliver 100% online programming INFRASTRUCTURE COMMUNICATION The “stuff” --- hardware, software, peripherals, people --- that makes technology possible Success of TrinityOnline depends on the quality, creativity and speed of innovation in five critical components Tools to share information and deliver instruction including website, broadcast media, marketing

  31. Conceptual Relationship: TrinityOnline to the Academic Units TRINITYONLINE Organizes and delivers 100% online programs Targeted to distant markets TrinityOnline Unit Provides: 1. Infrastructure development for 100% online delivery 2. Marketing and Admissions for Online Markets 3. Market Information for Program Development 4. Instructional Design and Faculty Delivery 5. Business plan and management of the unit Academic Unit Provides: 1. Curriculum and Academic Policy Oversight 2. Faculty consultants for design, delivery, assessment

  32. NEXT STEPS FOR ACADEMIC TECHNOLOGY • Faculty Moodle Training: Spring 2009, remainder of EDU and SPS, ALL CAS, advanced for ALL • Planning to launch TrinityOnline with RN-to-MSN program in Fall 2009 • Hiring Director of TrinityOnline and addition of other staff in FY10 for instructional design • Creation of a robust Academic Technology Plan to map the future for all dimensions of academic technology

  33. MANAGEMENT AND GOVERNANCE EXTERNAL SUPPORT eThink Regis Merlot Other… INFRASTRUCTURE CLASSROOMS LABS DESKTOPS EQUIPMENT TRINITYONLINE SOFTWARE MOODLE OTHER APPLICATIONS ADMINISTRATIVE IQ WEB POWERCAMPUS ACADEMIC TECHNOLOGY PLAN COMPONENTS NEW TOOLS CABLE TV VIDEO ON DEMAND CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS ABOUT TECH STAFF SUPPORT INSTRUCTIONAL DESIGN TEAM PEDAGOGY FACULTY DEVELOPMENT LIBRARY ALADIN WRLC DATABASES COMMUNICATION WEBSITE EMAIL TELEPHONY CABLE TV BUDGET AND PERSONNEL INNOVATION ENVIRONMENT DIGITAL MEDIA LAB PRODUCTION STUDIO

  34. Facilities Updates • Relocation of Academic Affairs, CAS Dean, DOSS and Continuing Education to Second Floor North Wing of Main • THANKS to SNDs for providing this beautiful space! • Relocation of ALL Enrollment Services staff to contiguous space in former Academic Affairs location • Relocation of some faculty offices in spaces vacated by these moves • Summer 09: Restroom Upgrade project to create new women’s restroom facility in current DOSS suite, renovate existing women’s room to make a larger men’s room (and in subsequent years we’ll tackle other restrooms in this building!!)

More Related