Title: Managing Cyberinfrastructure Strategically
1Managing Cyberinfrastructure Strategically
- Patrick Dreher
- Director, Advanced Computing Infrastructure and
Systems - Renaissance Computing Institute
2Outline
- Snowmass Meeting
- Campus Cyberinfrastructure (CCI)
characteristics engines - drivers - Cyberinfrastructure Summit in Denver
- Follow-on based on the Denver meeting
- EDUCAUSE initiated CI projects
- Community participation - how your institution
can become more involved in these efforts
3Campus Cyberinfrastructure Snowmass Workshop
- The meeting was the first workshop for the
Net_at_EDU Campus Cyberinfrastructure (CCI) working
group - Question what are the key components of
cyberinfrastructure? - Sponsored by the National Science Foundation
- August 45, 2006 Snowmass Village, Colorado
- http//www.educause.edu/nmm061
4Engines/drivers of Campus Cyberinfrastructure
- Campus Communities and Constituencies
- Enabler in partnerships with researchers, not as
an IT service provider - Computing and Communications
- Opportunities, synergies (grids), economies of
scale for high performance computing, research
networks and enhanced support facilities - Information Management
- Various aspects of data creation, storage,
handling, retrieval, distribution interpretation,
security, policies on research data, including
partnerships and opportunities with libraries and
repositories - Virtual communities
- Opportunities associated with scholars
partnering with IT organizations to create the
software environments that facilitate discovery
among distributed communities - Partnership Strategies
- Development of proposals and relationships that
enhance the partnership among researchers,
universities, and funding organizations to
enhance the nations cyberinfrastructure  (local,
state, federal, international, private)
5EDUCAUSEs Grand Challenges Program
- EDUCAUSE is hosting several meetings on topics of
particular importance to higher education - This Denver Cyberinfrastructure (CI) Summit was
part of the EDUCAUSE Grand Challenges Program - Denver meeting attended by about 50 higher
education leaders with particular expertise and
responsibility in the support of IT for research
6Cyberinfrastructure Summit
- List of attendees http//www.educause.edu/13280
7Goals for the Denver CIO Summit
- Obtain CIO insights and perspectives for
generating a set of national CI priorities - Capture best ideas and strategies for advancing
CI from this assembled group of IT leaders - Formulate strategies and tactics for EDUCAUSE and
its members - Meeting URL and final report located at
- http//www.educause.edu/cisummit
8Toward Managing CI Strategically
- Recap of the Summit Meeting
- Highlight/focus on several of the ideas (final
report contains the full details) - Summit Format
- Several brief overview talks
- Structured discussions within breakout groups
- Multi-tier role
- CIO level
- Middle layer campus cyberinfrastructure
- Individual principal investigator
9Overview Presentation Themes
- Cyberinfrastructure
- What is it?
- Why do we care?
- What CI components should be supported?
- Where are the resources?
- Organizationally who actually does the planning
and secures the funding? - Next steps?
- CI is a complex mix of components
10Cyberinfrastructure Players Peter Siegel Talk
Researchers
Faculty
Grad Students
Staff
University Consortia Systems
11Cyberinfrastructure Functions and ResourcesPeter
Siegel Talk
12Russ Hobby, Internet2
The Network is the Backplane for the Distributed
CI Computer Peter Siegel Talk
Human Support
Training
Help Desk
Education And Outreach
Collab Tools
Publishing
Network
13Breakout Discussion Groups Five Major Areas Of
Emphasis
- Leadership
- Support for Research
- Priority and Funding
- Short Term Strategies
- Long Term Strategies
14Common Categories Within Each Breakout
Discussion Group
- Established Practices
- Trends
- Ideas
- Recommendations
15Leadership
16Leadership-- Established Practices 1--
- Engagement communicate with executive
management show CI as a community need, not an
IT need - Understand the local environment and culture
- Build relationships with those building all the
of the rest of the campus physically and
infrastructure
17Leadership-- Trends --
- Planning, selling, engagement, and implementation
tied to the institution's strategic plan - Integrate CI into university plan
- The CIOs goals must be connected to institutional
strategy - CIO must be an equal colleague of those s/he is
influencing - CIOs should partner as the architect/rainmaker
for CI -- not just the plumber or the builder - Demo successful partnerships
- Active use of benchmarks
18Leadership-- Ideas --
- Define what CI is on your campus
- Need for collaborative educational effort
- CI is different from past IT initiatives it is
more externally influenced
19Leadership-- Recommendations --
- Have a major coordinated campaign, on a national
level, coordinated by EDUCAUSE - Some leaders are needed across community
disciplines to build groups that span and mediate
needs with actions and resources. - Influence those who control the money connect
with the leaders within the leadership groups.
20Support for research
21Research--Established Practices --
- The definition of core CI services changes over
time - Institutions should implement process to
- Ensure CI meets reasonable expectations
- Adjusts campus investments to shifting
priorities. - Researchers, IT leaders, and administration must
engage in continuous dialogue and review of the
CI environment, including funding agency plans
and commitments, to ensure the overall systems
sustainability.
22Research-- Trends --
- There is rapid expansion of demand for a robust
CI on campus to support research - Key elements needed in planning for research CI
needs - The technology itself
- Involvement of central IT
- Workflow, policy and funding proposal development
- Effective IT governance structure.
- Human considerations
- Early involvement, cooperation with research
faculty - collaborations and partnership arrangements
- Support and consultation
- System ease-of-use
- Reliability
- Interoperability
23Research-- Recommendations --
- Establishing life-cycle replacement process
- Run development, test, and production systems
simultaneously - Continuous involvement with users
- Balancing leading and bleeding edge
- Keep abreast of international, national,
regional, and campus developments - Understand how CI must adapt to accommodate
cross-disciplinary needs and domain-specific
research.
24Priority and Funding
25Priority and Funding-- Established Practices --
- Funding agencies spawn independent small clusters
for individual researchers, accentuating problems
of high cost solutions - Burdens need to be shared by campus and sponsors
- Focus on engagement Wins for the rainmakers
- ROI arguments used to get buy-in
- Establish common expectations/norms for costs
(including hidden costs) and benefits
26Priority and Funding-- Trends --
- CIO beginning to facilitate partnerships across
all campus sectors - Leading from the side, advocating
- CIO must nuture contact with researchers or s/he
is in danger of being just a utility - Sharing verses owning gt cultural change
- Use central seed funds, partial funding, priming
the pump - Functional lead vs technology lead
27Priority and Funding-- Ideas --
- Develop a commonly funded CI consortium approach
- Demonstrate environmental impact of
distributed/incoherent approach compared with CI - Campuses need to organize globally prioritize
locally - Practice good stewardship of the whole not just
local, - Tap faculty incentive packages to reinforce
common CI - Implement CI as a strategic capability for
institution - Focus on innovation
- Engage non-vested partners (economic
development, independent validation)
28Priority and Funding-- Recommendations --
- Create sustainable funding models
- Request an NAS/NAE study on value of federal
funding of CI to science and engineering
research. - ECAR should do a short-term study on campus CI
funding models - CCI Focus Group Report Campus
Cyberinfrastructure and Data Centers
29Short Term Strategies
30Short Term Strategies-- Established Practices --
- Begin to establish social technical trust
- Identify, engage leaders and influencers
- Create incentives for good behavior
- Create common body of materials
- Success failure stories
- Articles
- Research examples
- Events/meetings
31Short Term Strategies-- Trends --
- Partner CI to faculty initiatives and research
- Begin development of campus, regional, and
national awareness around CI - Tangible pilot projects
- Develop technical CI-oriented staffing and
expertise local, regional, national - Identify and leverage opportunities between
traditional IT CI
32Short Term Strategies-- Ideas --
- Align rewards to practicing good CI to hiring
tenure practices - Define CI as an institutional competitive
advantage - Real projects (venture capital model)
33Short Term Strategies-- Recommendations --
- Convene and engage prominent research faculty in
ways appropriate to your campus culture - Share outputs to larger CI community
- Search for compelling domain cases for
highlighting CI/piloting (demo projects).
34Long Term Strategies
35Long Term Strategies-- Established Practices --
- Growing importance of data mix public/private,
library - Paradigm shift service, collaboration, tools.
- Emphasis on growth of software tools for
collaboration - Greater focus on service
- Continued demand for end-user support
- Close alignment with existing institutional
incentives - Discipline-specific recognition of unique needs
and drivers for services and support
36Long Term Strategies-- Trends --
- The scale of collaboration will increase greatly
with deepening research collaboration
relationships - Between IT and researchers
- Among researchers themselves
- Increased connection to libraries and digital
asset collections (Information Management pillar) - CI will be leveraged in areas K-12, learning,
teaching, relationships - Manage change through transitions and paradigm
shifts. - Existing physical plants need updating
- Understand distinction between domain-specific
and discipline-specific
37Long Term Strategies-- Ideas --
- The nature of higher education could change based
on CI influences. - The effectiveness of technology will always be
debated - Remove non-capital costs from principal
investigator perspective. - Virtual Research Parks
- There will always be scarce resources, but
specifics will shift
38Long Term Strategies-- Recommendations --
- Develop assessment framework to identify trends,
usage, and effectiveness of CI - Assess generality/applicability of research CI to
broader communities (healthcare, K-12) - Move in the direction of fostering development
39EDUCAUSE Role
40EDUCAUSE Role-- Ideas --
- EDUCAUSE can engage international groups to
ensure that CI becomes a global focus. - EDUCAUSE should organize a focused joint meeting
of CIOs and vice presidents for research. - EDUCAUSE should engage funding agencies on how to
effectively fund CI - Formulate a unifying/mobilizing CI message
- EDUCAUSE has not been viewed as an organization
with a focus on research computing, but it needs
to be.
41EDUCAUSE Role-- Ideas --
- CCI Working Group should organize teams to move
some of the ideas reported here forward - Distribute CCI active white paper on CI which can
be quickly shared by CIOs with campus
constituencies - EDUCAUSE should foster a Wiki about CI that can
be used by interested institutions to post
inventories of their campuses CI resources and
services - CCI Focus Group Report Creating a Five Minute
Conversation About CyberInfrastructure
42EDUCAUSE Role-- Ideas --
- EDUCAUSE should facilitate a meeting with
researchers to discuss CI, perhaps concurrent
with the annual Supercomputing Conference. - EDUCAUSE should make extra effort to include
smaller institutions in the CI discussion. - EDUCAUSE should establish a speakers bureau on CI
to provide experts for a variety of forums
(including the Congress of the U.S.).
43EDUCAUSE Role-- Ideas --
- EDUCAUSE should develop a list of national
leaders who are proponents of CI to deliver
keynote addresses, etc. Draw these individuals
from presidents, VPs for research, provosts,
deans, senior faculty, and other administrators. - EDUCAUSE should create a forum for CIOs and
senior institutional leaders (such as VPs for
research) to address CI issues
44Opportunities for Community Involvement
45Initial Follow-on Actions from the Denver CI
Summit
46EDUCAUSE Action Item
- Recommendation
- EDUCAUSE should digest CI work done by others
(e.g., the NSF report) into a succinct IT action
plan, using new language to help facilitate the
discussion among important contributing parties - Charge
- Write a readable and compelling digest of the
several long documents now describing the field
(e.g., NSF Vision document) for the use of a
broader audience including university presidents,
campus CIOs and other university executives - Work with an extended advisory group to develop
steps and strategies that can be used by
university executives to move a campus ahead with
respect to CI.
47EDUCASUE CI Document Summary
- This group is just beginning its activities
- Outreach to community for document preparation
feedback - Advisory committee
- Guy Almes, Texas AM and co-chair CCI
- Alan Blatecky, RENCI
- Jim Bottum, Clemson
- Patrick Dreher, RENCI and co-chair CCI
- Sue Fratkin, consultant
- Dave Lambert, Georgetown
- Clifford Lynch, CNI
- Diana Oblinger, president elect, EDUCAUSE
- Craig Stewart, IU
48EDUCAUSE Action Item ECAR Study
- Charge --
- Determine present state of CI preparation and
strategies on U.S. campuses with particular
attention to funding strategies - Major focus on research institutions and STEM
research, but participation also from other
colleges plus teaching and learning. - CIOs will probably be asked to involve their
research VPs in the answers - Mark Sheehan, ECAR principal investigator playing
major role in this effort
49ECAR Study
- Advisory committee is now helping to formulate
the questions for the survey - Rosio Alvarez, LBL
- Sally Jackson, UIUC
- Kevin Morooney, PSU
- Jim Pepin, Clemson
- Peter Siegel, UCD
- Joel Smith, CMU
- EDUCAUSE is funding this directly so the results
can be shared publicly immediately on completion
50Middle LayerCampus Cyberinfrastructure
51Campus Cyberinfrastructure(CCI) Working Group
- Campus Cyberinfrastructure (CCI) Working Group
Open Meeting - Thursday, October 25, 20071200 p.m. - 500
p.m.Leonesa I, 1st Floor (Grand Hyatt Hotel) - http//www.educause.edu/E07/Program/11073?PRODUCT
_CODEE07/MTG39
52CCI Meeting Strengthening the middle CI
framework
- Themes for the CCI group meeting
- Where does one identify and support this common
core middle level of CI - Interfaces with the national layer and individual
PI independent of local campus cultures or
specific disciplines? - How can we create a palate of different tactics
that - Can be adopted to particular campus
- Support our agreed-upon national priorities?
- How can campuses, working through EDUCAUSE,
implement these strategies?
53Discussion and Questions