Title: Improving IT Governance in Higher Education
1Improving IT Governance in Higher Education
- Jack McCredie
- UC Berkeley, Emeritus ECAR
2EDUCAUSE 2006 Current IT IssuesSurvey (overall
results)
- Security identity management (5)
- Funding (1)
- Administrative/ERP/ systems (2)
- Disaster recovery/Business continuity
- Faculty development, support, training
- Infrastructure management
- Strategic planning (3)
- Governance, organization leadership (4)
- E-learning/distributed teaching learning
- Web systems services
3EDUCAUSE Critical IT Issues Surveys20002005
4Jacks Top IT Opportunities, Issues Challenges
- 2006
- Security privacy
- Re-invent central IT organizations
- Transform teaching learning environments
- Governance Structure
5Defining Governance
- The structure and process of authoritative
decision making across issues that are
significant for external as well as internal
stakeholders within a university. - ASHE-ERIC Higher Education Report, Governance in
the Twenty-First-Century University, Vol. 30, No.
1, 2003
6Defining Governance (cont)
- Who makes which decisions, who provides inputs
and analyzes the issues, who implements the
results of the decisions, and who settles
disputes when there is no clear consensus. - Producing timely decisions, responsible actions,
and reasonable results.
7Focus on Research Intensive Universities EDUCAUSE
Core Data Survey 2005 (121)
- 49 (m429 total)
- 76
- 59 Pres/provost
- 54 Yes
- 74 Yes
- 76 Yes
- 26 Yes
- 54 Yes
- Central IT staff as of total campus
- Title of VP or CIO
- Where IT reports
- Sits on cabinet
- Campus plan IT
- Stand alone IT plan
- Input from trustees
- Input from cabinet
8Baccalaureate Degree Granting EDUCAUSE Core Data
Survey 2005 (176)
- 88 (m22 total)
- 38
- 64 Pres/provost
- 41 Yes
- 80 Yes
- 57 Yes
- 27 Yes
- 65 Yes
- Central IT staff as of total campus
- Title of VP or CIO
- Where IT reports
- Sits on cabinet
- Campus plan IT
- Stand alone IT plan
- Input from trustees
- Input from cabinet
9Question
- How do most colleges and universities govern the
large and rapidly evolving set of information
technology (IT) activities and initiatives that
take place on their campuses?
10Characteristics of IT Structures in Many Research
Universities
- Independent research projects
- Departmental computing organizations
- Colleges and professional schools
- Campuswide organizations
- Systemwide coordination
- National and regional networking organizations
- Complex committee structures
- Distributed budgetary process
11Questions for you
- If IT governance is an issue on your campus, what
are some of the most prevalent symptoms of this
problem?
12Questions for you
- What percentage of your campus community
understands the IT governance structure on your
campus? - Do the campus leaders understand it?
13Symptoms of Governance Problems
- Lack of understanding of how governance works
- Significant gaps and overlaps
- IT security breakdowns
- Low measures of IT effectiveness
- Ineffective involvement of faculty
- Decisions take forever
- Lack of alignment
14Fall 2004 Academic Senate Committee on Computing
- View of IT Decision Making at UC Berkeley
15(No Transcript)
16Some Illustrative Measures from theCommon
Solutions Group (25 R1s)
- IT governance process well understood
- Faculty members are actively involved
- IT governance process is effective
- Department IT priorities are aligned with
institutional priorities
- 3.5 (out of 7)
- 4.5
- 4.4
- 4.6
17Weill Ross Governance Model
- Key Issues for each IT Decision Area
- IT Principles
- IT Architecture
- IT Infrastructure Strategies
- Customer Application Needs
- IT Investment and Prioritization
- Source MIT Sloan Management Review Winter 2005
18Weill Ross Governance Model
- Six IT Governance Archetypes
- Business Monarchy
- IT Monarchy
- Federal System
- IT Duopoly
- Feudal System
- Anarchy
- Source MIT Sloan Management Review Winter 2005
19Question
- Could your college or university save
significant money if leaders could enforce
important IT standards throughout the campus?
20Question
- Could you improve services by coordinating IT
personnel throughout the campus? What about the
quality of your IT personnel?
21Case Study University of California, Berkeley
- Strategic planning process
- Focus today on governance
- http//technology.berkeley.edu
22 UC Berkeley Background circa 2003
We do not have enough budget to do the job
correctly, but somehow we scrounge the resources
to do it multiple times in half-baked
ways. Anonymous Berkeley observer - 2003
23IT guiding principles for UC Berkeley
- Competing information technology needs must be
carefully evaluated and information technology
decision makers must balance - Innovation vs. Stability/reliability
Standardization vs. Autonomy/experimentation
Accessibility vs. Security/privacy Consensus
vs. Efficiency in decision making Centralized
services vs. Distributed services
Proprietary vs. Open source
24Guiding Principles (cont)
- Support for teaching and research
- Integration and inclusion
- Security and reliability
- Ubiquity
- Ease of use
- Alignment
- Information technology excellence
25Six Critical Campuswide IT Issues
IT support of these 3 areas
- We worked with each area to
- answer these questions
- What are the trends in this area?
- What are the implications of each trend for UC
Berkeley? - What are the specific implications for IT?
- And to
- Develop specific goals IT plan
1. Teaching learning
2. Research
3. Student experience
26Six Critical Campuswide IT Issues
IT support of these areas
1. Teaching learning
2. Research
3. Student experience
Structure Relationships among the
parts Governance Decision-making
process Funding The flow of, and path to, money
and across-the-board improvements in
4. Security, reliability, access, privacy
5. IT structure, governance, funding
6. Optimization of IT expertise
27IT Structure, Governance, and Funding
- Step 1 Self Study
- Step 2 IT External/Internal Review Committee
- Step 3 Recommendations
28Step 1 Self Study five key findings
- The IT investment process is disconnected from
the campus funding and budgeting process. - A "silo-specific" and incremental budgeting
approach is applied to central administrative
systems. - The CIO does not manage (or necessarily know
about) two-thirds or more of the IT activity on
campus.
29Step 1 Five key findings (cont)
- Central administrative roles are unclear with
respect to instructional computing, research
computing, and campus IT services. - There is no mechanism to encourage IT managers to
migrate toward "best practices" or to provide
basic levels of service.
30Step 2 Best practices Structure(As identified
by review committee)
- Achieve better partnership and coordination
between central and localIT units - Clarify and enable the position of Chief
Information Officer (CIO)
31Step 2 Best practicesGovernance(As identified
by review committee)
- Clarify IT decision making roles and
responsibilities of campus leaders - Distinguish central issues fromlocal issues
- Simplify committee structure and give clear and
needed roles
32Step 2 Best practicesFunding(As identified by
review committee)
- Connect analysis and decisions to the budgeting
process - Rationalize funding and enabling of both
instructional and research computing
33Question
- Should the campus CIO also manage the central IT
operations unit? What conflicts are inherent in
such a structure?
34Step 3 Final Recommendations
- The CIO function needs to be strengthened,
defined more clearly and differentiated from the
function of running IST. - The CIO should be involved in formulating all
campus-level IT budget requests. - Etc., etc.
35Question
- Why do IT governance practices in higher
education differ so much from best practices in
successful corporations?