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Statewide collaboration in information technology:

A presentation on the Arizona Course Applicability System (AZ CAS) and its implementation in higher education institutions. It covers the project overview, user satisfaction, and the five principles learned during the implementation.

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Statewide collaboration in information technology:

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  1. Statewide collaboration in information technology: Moving from paper to the WWW with the (Arizona) Course Applicability System Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

  2. Preview • An AZ CAS Demonstration • AZ CAS Project Overview • The Five Principles • User Satisfaction Data Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

  3. Brief demonstration of Arizona CAS Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

  4. AZ CAS Project Overview • Begun in 1996, due to action by the AZ Legislature. • Goal 1: create an electronic version of our paper “Course Equivalency Guide” • Goal 2: provide students and advisors with information about applicability of transfer courses to university degrees. Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

  5. Project Participants • CAS Implementation Team included all AZ public community colleges and universities. • Participants included technical, advising, and administrative representatives from each school. • Software was developed collaboratively by the State of Arizona and the Miami DARS team. • Two state-funded lines in AZ were devoted exclusively to CAS. Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

  6. What we learned: the Five Principles • Respect the disparity in starting points among varying institutions. • Remember that project success for any institution benefits all institutions • Reinforce interdependence between business and technical units. • Resolve problems using the motivation provided by the pressures of real-time data publication. • Recall that respect for institutional diversity is essential, as is institutional ownership of data and processes Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

  7. Principle 1. Respect the disparity in starting points among varying institutions • Two urban and eight rural community colleges participated. • Course bank files were easy or difficult, depending on the IT resources at the school. • One public university already ran DARS for degree audit, two did not. • This allowed one school to participate more fully, more quickly - but it has also created challenges. Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

  8. Principle 2. Remember that project success for any institution benefits all institutions • Administrative Course Equivalency Guide - • data from community colleges and universities are combined in a single report • This means that all schools are interdependent • There was a perception that the project would primarily benefit the community colleges • but ‘swirling students’ blur the distinctions Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

  9. Principle 3. Reinforce interdependence between business and technical units. • In some cases, different units had been in charge of doing the business of articulation and maintaining and using the systems to process it. • In this project, both types of unit have benefited from the experience of the other. • There’s an increasing understanding of the interdependence of these units on a campus. Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

  10. Principle 4: Resolve problems using the motivation provided by the pressures of real-time data publication. • Giving lots of groups in the state access to the data on equivalency meant that we had a large pool of “proofreaders” • We could respond by making necessary corrections quickly • We provided some innovative reports to assist our users to ensure data accuracy Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

  11. Principle 5: Recall that respect for institutional diversity, as well as data and process ownership is essential • Participants have now spent time on their colleagues’ campuses • Participants have an understanding of why processes and data display may differ from school to school • Participants feel a strong sense of ownership of their data Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

  12. Summary • Respect the disparity in starting points among varying institutions. • Remember that project success for any institution benefits all institutions • Reinforce interdependence between business and technical units. • Resolve problems using the motivation provided by the pressures of real-time data publication. • Recall that respect for institutional diversity is essential, as is institutional ownership of data and processes Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

  13. AZ CAS User Satisfaction • 75% say “Yes” • 88% say “Yes” • 76% say “Yes” • 89% say “Yes” • Did you find CAS to have clear directions? • Did you find CAS to have useful information? • Did you find CAS to be user-friendly? • Would you use CAS again? • Others? N = 199 as of May 10, 2001 Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

  14. Questions? Contact us: • Rebecca Moore, CAS Technical Analyst • rebecca.moore@asu.edu • Amy Fountain, Ph.D. CAS • amy.fountain@asu.edu • Arizona CAS: http://az.transfer.org/cas Track 4 Presentation - Directions for Higher Education and Information Technology: the Arizona Course Applicability System

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