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Management, E-commerce, & Applications
Richard Dumm, Pennsylvania State University
PSU implemented a payment-processing infrastructure that provides
a single, central, e-commerce capability and assures the highest level of security,
availability, accountability, control, and integrity for our e-commerce applications.
We now provide electronic credit card payment processing services to over 100+
departments at the Central campus and commonwealth colleges. We will provide
an overview of electronic credit card payment processing concepts, architecture,
experiences, partners, internal resources, and the eCommerce services we provide.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 9:45 AM to 10:45 AM.
Jason Moore, University of Rochester
In many respects, developing web applications for higher education
is more difficult than developing applications for any other industry: in education,
the need for high-quality applications is tremendous, but the funding and resources
needed for such development are often lacking. One extremely viable option to
overcoming this problematic discrepancy is to be open source aware. By using
pre-existing open source software and by developing in an open source environment,
the costs for developing and supporting educational web applications can be
dramatically reduced. In this session we will take a look at the history of
the open source movement as well as examine current examples to see what role
open source development can play in higher education.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 11:00 AM to
12:00 PM.
David VanScott, University of Rochester
Daryl DuLong, University of Rochester
Each year a new bunch of eager, excited, and enthusiastic
students enters the University of Rochester with one thing in mind – meet as
many people as possible in a very short amount of time! From a web content management
perspective, delivering all the necessary information year after year can be
a daunting and tedious task. The University of Rochester is entering its fourth
year of using a homegrown method to deliver information in a consistent and
uniform manner, while preserving its principle of student-led initiative. In
the end, UR is handing over control of the sites almost entirely to the student
body while retaining single information access points for students. Through
the vision and hard work of two dedicated students (one undergraduate and one
graduate), UR has continued to shape the way students communicate even before
they get to campus. Each class can now develop their own unique sense of identity
within the University community, including implementing their own look and feel.
We will cover how you can go about giving each class their own Web space while
still retaining some control, how the sites are managed, and how updates are
funneled. In addition, the evolution of the class site vision will be shown
through previous class sites and a sneak peek at the Class of 2009 website.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 1:15 PM to
2:15 PM.
John Chapman, Washington State University
WSU invested in e-commerce technology so it could develop
web-based e-commerce applications for centrally supported, high volume applications
such as tuition payments, student loan payments, admission application fees,
etc. However, we also wanted to make it easy for IT staff in departments to
be able to write secure e-commerce web applications for the many goods and services
offered across campus (e.g. College of Agriculture publications, KWSU TV pledge
drives, Student Rec Center fitness classes, etc.) For departments to want to
use our e-commerce services we knew we would have to offer them a solution that
was inexpensive, easy to use and available from whatever language and platform
they wanted to use. This presentation describes the services and tools we have
assembled for departmental IT staff to help them quickly and easily develop
secure e-commerce applications. It has been adopted by numerous departments
across campus and resulted in over twenty-five web-based e-commerce applications.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 2:45 PM to
3:45 PM.
Aimee J. Lewis, University of Rochester, Warner School
Whether you have six months or two weeks, every site must
be carefully planned from start to finish. This session will focus on the planning
and creation of new sites by following a step-by-step guide to aid in determining
scope, writing content, choosing the right design, and implementing a site with
measurable goals and favorable outcomes.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 4:00 PM to
4:30 PM.
Devendra Shrikhande, Northwest College
Online tools such as chats, forums and journals are
the next level of interaction in the Web space. Colleges have found them
invaluable in developing relationships with current and future students.
However, the demands of such functionalities are a bit different from
other online processes. This presentation will focus on how one can evaluate
and organize the logistics in successfully merging these tools within
institutional processes.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 4:45 PM to
5:15 PM.
Glenn Johnson, Penn State University
Is designing and developing an electronic portfolio
a reasonable and manageable expectation for faculty to require of students
– without increasing faculty workload? Recent studies at Penn State University
demonstrate a positive increase in activity student web publishing. Web
usage surveys, end of semester feedback surveys, and University Learning
Center data indicate that the web publishing tasks involved in publishing
e-Portfolios are not overly difficult to learn and that while mechanisms
need to be in place to support student learning of these new and necessary
skills, this support can be made available to those who need it. In addition,
this presentation will also review the benefits that have emerged as a
result of student involvement in e-Portfolio development as well as the
challenges that have presented themselves along the way.
This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 8:30 AM to
9:30 AM.
Kathy Farrell, Empire State College
Melissa Meehan, Buffalo State College
Ned Stankus, Hamilton College
Maryann Stopha, SUNY Geneseo
People responsible for web sites are often asked questions
like, “How many hits did the site get this month?” or “What are the top ten
search terms?” Such questions can be answered by using web metrics. Yet, it
can be surprisingly hard to get reliable answers. The most common source of
information, the web server log, can be problematic for numerous reasons, including
the sheer size of the log files, possible inaccuracies in the data, the challenge
of configuring the log analysis software and interpreting the reports it produces,
and the time and effort needed to develop and use “home-made” tools for answering
specialized questions. Other sources of data, such as online comment forms,
webmaster email messages, usability studies, etc., have their own advantages
and disadvantages. This panel presentation will address how to use web metrics
from server logs and other sources to develop, monitor, maintain, and improve
a web site. The presentation will begin with a brief overview of the topic and
provide basic definitions. The presentation will then cover two major topics:
(1) working with server logs; and (2) working with other data sources, such
as online surveys, helpdesk calls, webmaster emails, focus groups, usability
studies, etc. On each topic, panelists will discuss their own experiences and
respond to questions from the audience. The panel will conclude with final tips
and lessons learned about choosing and defining metrics, using various tools
and methods, and ideas for the future.
This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 10:00 AM to
12:00 PM.
Michael McGuire, The University of Tennessee
Jim Moran, The University of Tennessee
Planning is the determination of the goals and objectives
of an enterprise and the selection, through a systematic consideration
of alternatives, of the policies, programs and procedures for achieving
them. "Effective planning" occurs when the entire organization participates
in and buys in to the plan. With the introduction two years ago of my/UT,
an Oracle based web portal, it became possible to use the web to collect
data, improve data turn around, speed approval, increase involvement,
increase buy-in, and improve accountability. A natural opportunity to
apply and demonstrate the above arrived with The University of Tennessee's
re-accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS)
due in 2005. SACS has recently initiated web-based documentation of compliance
reports. In addition to data collection providing the documentation for
the SACS accreditation, the design of a web-based SACS' Compliance Report
that conformed to SACS' web requirements necessitated a different design
philosophy. This was done through the portal as well. The implementation
of the SACS project on the web protal coincided with other initiatives
at the University to coordinate planning and evaluation activities. This
has allowed us to implement a web-based strategic planning tool for the
university to allow units and administration to have the data they need
to plan the university's future. We will demonstrate and discuss the tools,
processes, design decisions, administrative decisions, and implementation
of this project that has enabled us to have a more effective planning
process without undue burden on reporting units.
This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 1:15 PM to
2:15 PM.
Mark A. Greenfield, University at Buffalo
Kara Saunders, University at Buffalo
This presentation will explore the “Integration of Online
Academic Tools” Initiative at the University at Buffalo, an important project
which has proven to be more challenging and more rewarding than initially imagined.
This multi-phase project involves a series of enhancements to, and the integration
of, UB’s online academic tools and resources, including class schedules, the
undergraduate catalog, the “Rainbow Book” (an informal guide to programs and
career options), web-based class registration, degree audits, and various university
web sites that share academic information. With the primary goal of easing academic
processes for students, we began integration of these tools which, historically,
had been developed independently. The end goal of our integration is a seamless
system whereby students are informed of requirements, offerings, and policy
and are provided with the tools they need to perform the tasks involved. Examples
of integration include: ·Display course descriptions and prerequisite information
from the undergraduate catalog on the online class schedule. ·Display when a
course is offered in the undergraduate catalog ·Using a single database to generate
a list of academic programs that can be used on any and all relevant university
sites, such as department home pages and university Admissions, completely separating
the content from its presentation. As with many university initiatives, we encountered
unforeseen obstacles as well as unforeseen benefits as we have begun integration.
The presentation will focus on the strategy and implementation of the integration
project, along with the technical, cultural and political challenges involved. This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 2:45
PM to 3:45 PM.
Content: Strategies & Design
Johnny Won
Class websites at colleges and universities are often
sought out by students to find the latest information about their classes
and course work. In an ideal world, the websites are perfectly organized
with perfect information, perfectly relevant to the class on hand. The
reality however, is unsurprisingly the opposite. For non-web professionals,
the process of publishing websites is tedious, confusing and difficult,
despite “easy” tools such as WYSIWYG editors, Macromedia Contribute, and
websites that build websites. The vast majority of professors, teaching
assistants and students do not know HTML or the federally mandated accessibility
guidelines. Most websites designed by non-web professionals are notoriously
crude, poorly organized, broken and seldom made accessible. Content management
systems have matured in the past few years and now allow an amazingly
easy system for distributing information. From Blogs to open source CMS
packages like Plone, this presentation will focus on the difficult problem
of creating and maintaining websites in higher education and offer a brief
look at technologies that could revolutionize higher education communities.
This presentation will reveal the potential social and academic possibilities
of allowing greater information dissemination that can be made through
technology. What happens when an economics professor can freely comment
on Alan Greenspan’s actions in an online journal to the audience of millions?
What about students who can read any notes for any class at any point
in time?
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 9:45 AM to
10:45 AM.
Michelle Tarby, Le Moyne College
As colleges and universities look to streamline costs, we'll
examine the process and problems we went through bringing our alumni online
community in-house after contracting with a third party vendor for the previous
three years. We'll review the preliminary steps involved - from building a successful
project team and interest from the Institutional Advancement personnel to reviewing
the technological tools we had available. We'll also discuss the practical issues
we encountered during the design and development phase. Finally, we'll take
a look at the problems encountered in our testing phase, as well as the steps
we took to resolve them. We'll look at how the project was received following
the launch of the site and what we're considering for the next phase of the
project.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 11:00 AM to
12:00 PM.
Andrew Stevens, Indiana University, Bloomington,
School of Library and Information Science
HTML and other web technologies provide numerous methods to
make web forms more accessible. This presentation will outline the correct usage
of a few of these technologies, W3C accessibility guidelines that relate to
forms, and provide general strategies for delivering web content in an accessible
manner.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 1:15 PM to
2:15 PM.
Rob Withers, Miami University
Rob Casson, Miami University
Aaron Shrimplin, Miami University
College and university libraries provide resources to
faculty and students in dozens of academic disciplines, but the average
user only needs information in a handful. To more effectively guide end
users to resources they need, we have used open source scripting to create
a passworded administrative interface which enables subject specialists
to create and edit lists of indexes, electronic journals, electronic books,
and other resources including web sites and research guides. Specialists
may create their own listing of other resources. In addition, subject
specialists may also use the administrative interface to create announcements
in their subject area to effectively reach faculty and students interested
in new databases or collections that are appropriate to their area. Subject
specialists will also be able to specify which databases should be included
in a federated search for each subject area. This interface benefits all
involved with the Libraries’ web site. Subject specialists can make immediate
changes to web sites within their purview. Web developers don’t have to
worry about pages complying with web publishing standards and code because
the source code and graphics are automatically generated. And end users
are immediately guided to a selection of resources in their area of interest.
As the University prepares to launch a portal to internal users, we anticipate
being able to automatically push a list of resources to portal users based
on their course enrollment (if they are students) or department(s) (if
they are faculty).
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 2:45 PM to
3:45 PM.
Cynthia A. Ramlo, Indiana University Department of Telecommunications
This showcase will look at how two instructional Flash modules
were designed and developed. The particular focus will be on revealing how theories
from the field of telecommunications can inform the design of more compelling
and usable web and interactive designs.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 4:00 PM to
4:30 PM.
Elaine Nelson, Pierce College District 11
We spend so much time creating Web sites and services to help
students achieve their goals; how do we know whether our efforts are bearing
fruit? This showcase will highlight an assessment project that evaluated the
success of the Pierce College Web site as a resource for students. I will review
techniques that we used for evaluation, the assessment process, how our results
are affecting the future development of our site, and how to fit assessment
activities and ongoing improvement into the site life cycle.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 4:45 PM to
5:15 PM.
Melissa Meehan, Buffalo State College
Many say the Web is higher education’s most powerful
marketing tool. As a result, the expectation is clear: fresh, accurate
content in a polished, easy-to-use interface. How to meet this expectation
three clicks in, however, has become the real question, as many university
sites still function as a collection of disparate sub-sites. Buffalo State
successfully tacked toward--and ultimately implemented--CMS (with templates!)
in an environment where self-publishing had been the norm.
This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 8:30 AM to
9:30 AM.
Andrew Stevens, Indiana University School of Library and
Information Science
This presentation will cover how to create structurally correct,
forward-compatible sites with CSS, while maintaining support for legacy
browsers. W3C recommendations, their evolution, and their rationale will
be reviewed. Common rendering dissimilarities between browsers will be
highlighted, followed by a discussion of how browsers' differing support
and interpretation of web standards impact web development. Practical
techniques for dealing with browser quirks will outlined and assessed,
along with strategies to help ensure that web sites constructed today
remain accessible in future viewing devices.
This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 10:00 AM to
12:00 PM.
Daniel JS Lewis, Plattsburgh State University
David Anderson, SUNY Buffalo
On the tenth anniversary of the invention of the web,
it's still amateur hour. Higher education sites are rife with blatant
content, usability, and accessibility problems. Jumping off from the lessons
in Mark Twain's "Fenimore Cooper's Literary Offenses" and incorporating
the work of current usability experts, we'll look at existing higher ed
websites with an eye to improving the content, usability, and accessibility.
A simple outline for planning and implementing higher education websites
that actually meet the needs of constituent customers will be presented.
A brief question and answer period is anticipated.
This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 1:15 PM to
2:15 PM.
Wendy Dibean, University of Miami
Lindsay Boatner, University of Miami
Over the past 4 years, the University of Miami has been planning
to release a personalized portal (myUM) to the University community. This fall,
with the help of students, faculty and staff from around the university, the
dream has been realized. Before and during implementation, we had to deal with
many issues, including user management, credential management, data management,
customization, content, and buy-in from all areas of the university. The dream
has many levels and could not all be realized at once, but the launch for the
fall includes single sign-on to major University applications (e.g. Self Service,
Course Management, Email, and Content Management), personalized delivery of
content and announcements, customization abilities, and group collaboration.
This presentation will show features of myUM, and will discuss lessons learned
and future plans. This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 2:45 PM to
3:45 PM.
Technical: Propeller Hats Required
Jim Gorman, University at Buffalo
Jim Brandt, University at Buffalo
How to expand your web serving capacity when your servers
are at their limit. -- How many times have we heard Scotty tell Captain
Kirk that the engines just didn't have anything left to give? Have you
reached this point with your web servers? As the web has become an integral
component in delivering student services, medium- to large-size servers
went from being excessive to barely adequate. You add memory, disk, and
CPU, but you still can't meet the demand during peak load times. We reached
this point at UB, and embarked on a 2-year program to re-engineer our
server software using new open source tools and re-architect our hardware
environment to allow us to leverage many small machines rather than a
single large one. We'll tell you how we did it.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 9:45 AM to
10:45 AM.
Vlad Grinman, Boston University University Information
Systems
Robin Smith, Boston University University Information Systems
Jacalyn Reisz, Boston University University Information
Systems
The XML-Gateway was developed as a toolkit for integrating
Boston University's Authentication Service with vended products and user systems.
Additionally, it can provide data to these requestors in a secure, dynamic,
and controlled process, thus eliminating the proliferation of accounts at vendors'
sites and in the university departments. The required data is exchanged real-time,
thereby eliminating warehousing and data synchronization issues. A Win all the
way around.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 11:00 AM to
12:00 PM.
Dale B. Grady, University of Rochester Information Technology
Services
Ten years ago if your server went offline, the administration
might not have noticed. Today the phone rings before the crash is complete.
The deans and the president notice immediately. It must stay online! When
you have the usual firewalls, security, intrusion detection, and redundancy,
what else can you do to protect your server? It cannot be locked in the
closet for protection because it must be available to users. Security
must be balanced with Service. The University of Rochester in-house developed
development/production server model has long been used in industry because
it gives hackers little to work with. The production server has no vulnerable
software and no shell accounts while the development server uses a single
SSL secured pipeline to the production server. This presentation will
describe, demonstrate, and review the technical specifications of a development/production
server system implemented in a university environment. We will examine
security issues, vulnerabilities, and solutions. A key secure utility
for moving pages and entire sites to production called Deploy will be
demonstrated. Cost/benefits will also be discussed including the ability
to use a full production copy for development and testing that is inaccessible
to the public.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 1:15 PM to
2:15 PM.
Jim Brandt, University at Buffalo
Testing. During development, we all do it, whether we like
it or not. And since we don't like it, we do just enough to get things working.
But what happens when we need to make a change? How do we debug when something
goes wrong down the road? Uncomment those debug statements? With test-driven
development, you do the same testing, you just record it. Then you automate
your tests so you can ensure that when you test, you test the same way - every
time. And since you have your tests recorded in code, you can run 100 tests
against your application after a DB or operating system upgrade in 25 seconds.
And you can pass all your testing knowledge along to the next guy in a script.
For an added bonus, why not do this with freely available tools? Utilizing a
few available perl modules you can create test suites for your web applications.
This talk would walk through the why and how to do this. We will also discuss
how to utliize this in your development effort to ensure you have your tests
completed right when your coding is done.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 2:45 PM to
3:45 PM.
Lori Packer, University of Rochester
Many university Web developers feel that usability testing
is a luxury they can't afford, both in money and time. "Usability testing is
for large corporate sites, not my department homepage," they say to themselves.
Well, don’t be so sure. Any Web project can benefit from a round or two of testing,
and this presentation will show you how to begin. Using a case study from usability
tests of a university homepage redesign, you'll see what you can learn from
even a relatively simple test with real users. Your site can only benefit from
the experience.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 4:00 PM to
4:30 PM.
Rick Ells, Computing & Communications University of Washington
With the aggressive rise of the practice of spoofing
to coax users into executing worms and phishing to mislead users into
giving away sensitive information, inconsistency in an organization's
identity and practices that erode trust in that identity have become major
liabilities. This presentation reviews literature on branding, identity,
and trust for ideas on how to counter spoofing and phishing. The scope
of topics covered include Web sites, graphical identity elements, transactional
processes (such as sending email confirmation of online purchases) and
email language and formatting. The results of interviews with persons
who have been deceived by spoofing and phishing will also be covered.
A basic theory to be presented is that users judge the validity of interactions
with the organizations on their overall experience with the organization,
rather than just in individual transactions. The more the organization
works to create trust and relationships with the user across the full
range of its interactions with the user, the more likely the user will
be able to recognize a false contact.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 4:45 PM to
5:15 PM.
Martha Carrer Cruz Gabriel, NMD Internet & Multimedia Ltda
The potential of bringing the web to all existing phone
devices, through voice recognition and interpretation, is explosive: this
is the alliance of the widest computing network (the Internet) with the
most pervasive device on Earth (the telephone). VoiceXML is the bridge
between the phone and the web. The presentation will cover the basic aspects
of building a voice recognition interface/system using VoiceXML and GSL
(Grammar Specification Language). It will also present the uses and challenges
of voice interfaces. A simple web application accessed via a VXML gateway
will be shown to illustrate the steps of development and deployment.
This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 8:30 AM to
9:30 AM.
Daniel Barnes, University of Rochester, College Enrollment
HTML forms play an intrinsic role in any web-based application.
From the basic login form to the advanced Exchange Web Forms, getting and manipulating
data from the user is a constant consideration for any serious web developer.
The process of creating a basic HTML form, from designing the interface to coding
the backend, may take days. Often, the code used to manipulate one form’s data
could work just as well for another. However, because the names of fields in
the databases are different, the developer must write separate logic for each
form. Furthermore, form design is often inelegant, inaccessible, or unattractive.
A design change to a site could mean significant structural overhaul to forms.
Because they rarely make use of accessibility elements like labels or option
groups, typical forms are inaccessible under Section 508 and the WCAG. On those
rare occasions when a form has a pleasing interface, it often comes at the sacrifice
of web standards like XHTML and CSS. All of this takes away from dealing with
the most fundamental principle of any form: what purpose it serves. XML acts
as a container, or vessel, simply carrying data in a standardized format for
access by different systems and resources. In the case of forms, XML makes life
for the developer much easier. Forms written using the XML Forms specification
take less time to code, are fully extensible, reusable, dynamic, capable of
server- and client-side validation, and fully integrate with any database (including
automatic updates and inserts). All the developer has to do is define basic
attributes of the form and its elements. XSL is used to process the form into
(X)HTML, WML, XML-FO, or any other format for viewing in diverse environments.
The first hour of this session will cover installation, the XML Forms specification,
creating a basic form, and processing using ASP. The second hour will cover
more advanced topics like multi-page forms, encryption, auto-filling elements,
creating dependencies (drill-downs), and saving to PDF, as well as how to use
the XML Forms Online Editor to make form creation even easier. With a little
creativity and initiative, there is no limit to what can be accomplished with
XML Forms. NOTE: Although inspired by the same idea and developed around the
same time, XML Forms are not a part of the W3C XForms specification. As an alternative
to XForms, this technology is much easier to learn, quicker to develop, and
requires no special client software to use.
This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 10:00 AM to
12:00 PM.
John Wagner, Princeton University
Princeton is providing an open access web service platform
with a primary audience of Php/MySql users. We initially started with custom
built software but are migrating the service to OpenPKG (target date 9/1). The
presentation would discuss: Building the service including the software requirements
imposed by the OpenPKG architercture, security concerns in an open access environment,
MySQL self service databases, migration success stories and the usual "We tried
it, it was a bad idea" commentary.
This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 1:15 PM to
2:15 PM.
Michael Adams, University of Northern Colorado
Sometimes it seems that CSS layout isn't worth it. Tables
are just so easy, why would I want to change it? Well, dry your eyes, Sport,
there's help on the way. We'll walk through the basics of CSS layout, hit the
high points of technique and browser compatibility, and discover some very helpful
troubleshooting techniques. We'll look at and change some example pages with
a text editor and with Dreamweaver MX 2004. It really isn't as hard as it first
appears. This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 2:45 PM to
3:45 PM.
Content Management Systems: Planning & Implementing
Drew Hill, Web Coordinator, SUNY Oswego Office of Public Affairs
This is a case study or synopsis of the steps taken to re-design and develop SUNY Oswego\\\'s Web presence while implementing an institution-wide content management system (CMS.) This session will likely interest those considering implementing a CMS, a site redesign, or both. Topics to be touched upon include: o Pre-RFP Considerations o RFP Issuance/Evaluation/Procurement o Getting Started o Navigating Change within Organizational Culture o Project Management o Major Project Phases o Site Launch o Post Site Launch Issues o Summary - What Went Right/What Went Wrong
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 9:45 AM to
10:45 AM.
Patricia sperry, University of Notre Dame
Large enterprise content management systems (i.e. Documentum) have all
the bells and whistles promise to take care all of the of the web content
issues. We (University of Notre Dame) piloted a large enterprise content
management system and found it complicated to install and the bells and
whistles were more than our web developers really wanted. Our second try
at helping our web content authors update their websites without technical
knowledge has been a winner. The software we rolled out to campus is Macromedia
Contribute. The content owners are able to use basic word processing skills
to update the website. We have implemented a lower cost content management
system that works for the content authors on your campus! We will share
the lessons and tricks we have learned.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 11:00 AM to
12:00 PM.
Greg Polit, Indiana University
Copenhagen Content Management System is a powerful tool
for managing University’s information resources. It has an essential
role in integrated and crisis communications efforts across Indiana University.
Currently this XML based CMS powers IU Media Relations site, and manages
news content on a number of external static websites including IU Gateway,
IU’s onestart portal, a number of IU’s regional campus homepages,
administrative, and school websites. It is evolving into a central repository
for all official Indiana University content including news, spotlights,
photos, and faculty biographies. Session will discuss the CMS implementation,
and focus on how this CMS helps to increase site stickiness by categorizing,
interrelating and grouping various types of content via associations and
threading. It will also discuss how multiple dynamic web sites can be
powered by this single content repository, each with unique branding and
functionality.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 1:15 PM to
2:15 PM.
Larry LaTarte, University of Notre Dame
A campus portal can be a great tool, but only if your user community adopts it. While focusing on the ins and outs of the technical implementation are required to ensure a stable and feature-rich web site, it is equally important, if not more so, to engage your users early and often. This presentation will describe the process used at the University of Notre Dame to engage our users before and during the launch of our SCT Luminis campus portal, and will share insights gained from a year in the portal trenches: both positive and negative. Issues to be covered include: targeting your audiences, generating institutional buy-in, marketing to the masses, and navigating university process and politics.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 2:45 PM to
3:45 PM.
Daniel Pedersen, Rochester Institute of Technology
RIT’s Division of Finance and Administration has made a commitment to the direct utilization of students in the development and maintenance of its web systems. The division relies directly upon students to execute and complete major software and web projects to facilitate the division’s goals. These systems are utilized not just internally to F&A but by all of RIT and its external customers. The students play an integral and essential role in the success of the division. The challenge is to efficiently and effectively utilize the diversity and uniqueness of the students despite the constant transformation of the team composition to ensure high quality and consistent production delivery.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 4:00 PM to
4:30 PM.
Kirk M. Anne, SUNY Geneseo
As the old saying goes, time is money. Is it better to purchase a prepackaged portal product or spend hours/days/weeks/months/years working with a "free" one? This session will look into the pros and cons using uPortal and Oracle Portal as examples. uPortal is an open source project used by many schools as the basis for their portal system. Oracle Portal is a commercial portal package that is gaining ground in the academic environment.
This session is scheduled for Mon, Oct 11, from 4:45 PM to
5:15 PM.
Wendy Dibean, University of Miami
Hans Holland, University of Miami
Survey research is important to all aspects of life at the University of Miami. Students perform surveys as research for papers, thesis, and dissertations. Faculty use surveys to write journal articles and books. Administrative departments including Admissions Office and Alumni Relations perform surveys to find better ways to enhance services. If these surveys could be done online, with the results stored in a way that would provide for quick and simple analysis, it would save a lot of time (and money) for the University. Now they can be done online. The University of Miami has implemented SPSS mrInterview, an online survey tool. This presentation will describe the features utilized at the University, the policies necessary to implement an enterprise-wide survey application, and the lessons learned along the way.
This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 8:30 AM to
9:30 AM.
Daniel M. Frommelt, University of Wisconsin – Platteville
Web standards have been around for a long time, so why aren't developers adopting them? Lean how to do a conversion to Web Standards to be more accessible, save development time, and most importantly save bandwidth. The presentation will contain a brief overview of Web Standards, the benefits, and demonstrate a conversion of a web site from a traditional method of web design to a web standards based design.
This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 10:00 AM to
12:00 PM.
Bill Rose, Penn State's School of Information Sciences and Technology
Rose Pruyne, Penn State's School of Information Sciences and Technology
A well-chosen content management system can go a long way toward addressing an institution's issues of Web content. But don't expect a CMS to solve all your content problems. Before you go shopping for a CMS, make sure you have your Web content procedure nailed down. Learn about content management best practices from a seasoned Web administrator and publications professional.
This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 1:15 PM to
2:15 PM.
Dale B. Grady, University of Rochester
Dennis O'Donnel, University of Rochester Athletics and Recreation
The most dynamic content on your site is likely the athletics site. Rosters are changed each semester, schedules are modified, and scores are constantly posted. Photos and bios are changed at least yearly and game stories are posted as events happen. Timeliness is critical. This case study describes and demonstrates the Athletics Content Management System, an in-house-developed, database-driven, dynamic content system that manages articles, a photo library, and roster/player/staff libraries with bios, scores, and statistics. This successful system, operational for more than a year, will be described from beginning (comparing commercial systems and defining the specifications) to implementation (cost of development, manpower savings, and timeliness improvements). Selected code will be reviewed, and performance and security issues discussed.
This session is scheduled for Tue, Oct 12, from 2:45 PM to
3:45 PM.
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