Documents Contributed by ECAR, Advanced Networking, and High-Performance Computing

Higher Education IT and Cyberinfrastructure: Integrating Technologies for Scholarship Roadmap

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Higher Education IT and Cyberinfrastructure: Integrating Technologies for Scholarship Roadmap (ID: ECM0803)
Author(s):Judith A. Pirani (EDUCAUSE) and Mark C. Sheehan (EDUCAUSE)
Origin:Documents Contributed by ECAR, Roadmaps (06/11/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This ECAR roadmap synthesizes the important issues and recommended actions drawn from the 2008 study, Higher Education IT and Cyberinfrastructure: Integrating Technologies for Scholarship , by Mark C. Sheehan. The ECAR research study explores higher education’s involvement in five areas of research-related information technologies: high-performance computing resources, cyberinfrastructure applications and tools, data storage and management resources, advanced network infrastructure resources, and resources for collaboration within virtual communities. The report, which is based on results of a quantitative survey of 369 U.S. and Canadian colleges and universities and consultation with cyberinfrastructure experts and 12 university executives and technical staff members, discusses who uses, who provides, and who funds cyberinfrastructure resources as well as how important each technology is and will be to research and teaching.

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Advanced Networking Services: Current Issues in Higher Education

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Title:Advanced Networking Services: Current Issues in Higher Education (ID: ERB0809)
Author(s):John W. McCredie (University of California, Berkeley)
Origin:Documents Contributed by ECAR, Research Bulletins (04/29/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This research bulletin explores the advanced networking issues and investments that colleges and universities that aspire to support their faculty and students in leading edge research and education activities must face in the near future. It is drawn from the work of the Advanced Networking Services Work Group at the University of California, which was charged with evaluating the current state of UC’s networking infrastructure, identifying best practices in global networking activities, and making recommendations to position UC for competitive advantage. The author served as chair of the Work Group. 

Citation for this work: McCredie, Jack. “Advanced Network Services: Current Issues in Higher Education” (Research Bulletin, Issue 9). Boulder, CO: EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research, 2008, available from http://www.educause.edu/ecar.

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This publication is currently password protected. All faculty, staff, and students from institutions that have subscribed to ECAR at the ECAR Participating, Comprehensive Content, Corporate, and Research Bulletins Package levels are authorized to access this publication by using their EDUCAUSE personal profile.

Higher Education IT and Cyberinfrastructure: Integrating Technologies for Scholarship

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Higher Education IT and Cyberinfrastructure: Integrating Technologies for Scholarship (ID: ERS0803 )
Author(s):Mark C. Sheehan (EDUCAUSE)
Origin:Documents Contributed by ECAR, Research Studies (06/10/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This 2008 ECAR research study explores higher education’s involvement in five areas of research-related information technologies: high-performance computing resources, cyberinfrastructure applications and tools, data storage and management resources, advanced network infrastructure resources, and resources for collaboration within virtual communities. The report, which is based on results of a quantitative survey of 369 U.S. and Canadian colleges and universities and consultation with cyberinfrastructure experts and 12 university executives and technical staff members, discusses who uses, who provides, and who funds cyberinfrastructure resources as well as how important each technology is and will be to research and teaching.

Citation for This Work: Sheehan, Mark C. Higher Education IT and Cyberinfrastructure: Integrating Technologies for Scholarship (Research Study, Volume 3). Boulder, CO: EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research, 2008, available from http://www.educause.edu/ecar.

 

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Developing and Extending a Cyberinfrastructure Model

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Title:Developing and Extending a Cyberinfrastructure Model (ID: ERB0805)
Author(s):Rosio Alvarez (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
Origin:Documents Contributed by ECAR, Research Bulletins (03/04/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This research bulletin explores how to develop, deploy, and extend cyberinfrastructure assets within higher education—both within and across institutions. As research becomes increasingly computational, data-intensive, and interdisciplinary, innovative approaches for functional cyberinfrastructure models become ever more important. This bulletin describes a model that was developed at one institution and then deployed across institutions, with the goal of addressing issues as diverse as the need for simulation systems rather than wet labs, insufficient computational research support to help an institution compete for top-notch faculty, and astronomical spikes in power and cooling demands.

Citation for this work: Alvarez, Rosio. “Developing and Extending a Cyberinfrastructure Model” (Research Bulletin, Issue 5). Boulder, CO: EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research, 2008, available from http://www.educause.edu/ecar.

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This publication is currently password protected. All faculty, staff, and students from institutions that have subscribed to ECAR at the ECAR Participating, Comprehensive Content, Corporate, and Research Bulletins Package levels are authorized to access this publication by using their EDUCAUSE personal profile.

Cyberinfrastructure Resources and Practices: Survey Questionnaire

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Cyberinfrastructure Resources and Practices: Survey Questionnaire (ID: ESI07K)
Author(s):Mark C. Sheehan (EDUCAUSE)
Origin:Documents Contributed by ECAR, Survey Instruments (11/27/2007)
Type:Surveys
Abstract:

This November 2007 survey is a critical component of the EDUCAUSE Center on Applied Research (ECAR) study of cyberinfrastructure in higher education. It seeks to understand the perspectives of information technology leaders and others currently working in universities and colleges. This study updates and expands our communities' understanding of how leading-edge information technology resources for research, scholarship, creative activity, and teaching and learning are utilized, provided, supported, and funded. This study is being conducted through the collaboration of many parties including the Council of Australian University Directors of Information Technology (CAUDIT), the European University Information Systems organization (EUNIS), the EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research (ECAR), and the EDUCAUSE Net@EDU Campus Cyberinfrastructure (CCI) working group.

How To Cite This Work: EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research. "Cyberinfrastructure Resources and Practices: Survey Questionnaire" (Survey Instrument). Boulder, CO: ECAR, 2007, available from http://www.educause.edu/ecar.

 

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Improving IT Governance in Higher Education

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Title:Improving IT Governance in Higher Education (ID: ERB0618)
Author(s):John W. McCredie (University of California, Berkeley)
Origin:Documents Contributed by ECAR, Research Bulletins (08/29/2006)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This research bulletin examines the ways many research universities govern their IT activities, explores some inherent problems in these processes, identifies several good practices, and suggests changes that may improve the current state of the art. It draws on research conducted by MIT and ECAR on IT alignment and governance; information submitted to the EDUCAUSE Core Data Service survey; the results of an extensive review of IT governance at the University of California, Berkeley; a one-day governance workshop hosted by the Common Solutions Group; the work of a project team participating in the IT Leaders Project; and the observations and results of several external review committees on which the author has served.

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Supporting Research Computing Through Collaboration at Princeton University

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Title:Supporting Research Computing Through Collaboration at Princeton University (ID: ECS0602)
Author(s):Judith A. Pirani (EDUCAUSE), Donald Z. Spicer (University System of Maryland), and Ronald Yanosky (EDUCAUSE)
Origin:Documents Contributed by ECAR, Case Studies (05/23/2006)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

As a complement to ECAR's core study about IT Engagement in Research, this case study examines Princeton University's institutional research computational facility, which is developed and funded collaborative by its Office of Information Technology, university organizations, and individual faculty members. It explores the critical elements involved in creating a collaborative environment for research computation as well as the organizational structures that foster synergy between computational research and information technology infrastructure.

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Calit2: A Case Study in a Next-Generation Research Environment

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Title:Calit2: A Case Study in a Next-Generation Research Environment (ID: ECS0601)
Author(s):Donald Z. Spicer (University System of Maryland) and Bruce A. Metz (Thomas Jefferson University)
Origin:Documents Contributed by ECAR, Case Studies (02/08/2006)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

In higher education, team-based, collaborative research activities, call for new modalities and methods of investigation. Calit2 is responding to this challenge by creating a next-generation research environment that includes a range of technical and nontechnical systems to foster large-scale, multidisciplinary collaborations in innovative ways. This case study explores the breadth and depth of this extensive initiative, including how Calit2 is experimenting with multiple technological methodologies to support locally based, distributed, and virtual research collaborations.

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