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Cloud Computing 101: Universities Are Migrating to The Cloud For Performance And Savings

university
by OZinOH

INTRODUCTION

A Different Way of Computing 

I need a computer. Actually, I need the processing power of hundreds of computing hours. Heretofore, if I was a researcher running data or testing a model, that meant using solely the computing power available on my campus computing system. For a major operation, that might mean waiting behind other faculty and student projects, and then having to run my data over days at a time. Today, that computing power can be had at my fingertips in a matter of minutes – or even seconds.

Likewise, my email, my files, my programs were all formerly on my computer – or on my campus’ mainframe. Today, those operations – and my data – may reside on servers in Washington State – or in Bangalore.  And this may not just be for my computing needs. Today, it may be for my entire campus and all of the institution’s students and faculty.

Welcome to the world of cloud computing!

The Cloud Computing Concept 

The Economist reminds us that: “Computing has constantly changed shape and location—mainly as a result of new technology, but often also because of shifts in demand.”  We have seen revolutionary computing technologies – truly “game changing” concepts – come about roughly once each decade in the “modern era” of computing since around 1945 when computing came to mean computations performed by a machine, not by man. From the mainframe era of the 1960s to the advent of minicomputers in the 1970s, the personal computer in the 1980s, the growth of the Internet and the Web in the 1990s, and the explosion of cell phones and other smart, Web-connected devices in the past 10 years.

Now, many think that cloud computing will be “the next big thing.” Indeed, Gartner  believes that in the end, the impact of the cloud model will be “no less influential than e-business.”  If industry analysts are correct, we thus stand at an inflection point – a true paradigm change – in the evolution of computing.

The basic idea behind cloud computing is that anything that could be done in computing – whether on an individual PC or in a corporate data center – from storing data to communicating via email to collaborating on documents or crunching numbers on large data sets – can be shifted to the cloud. As can be seen in Table 1, cloud computing encompasses a wide variety of offerings, including: SaaS (Software as a Service), PaaS (Platform as a Service), and IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service).

Table 1

Variants of Cloud Computing

Level

Label

Description

User Level

SaaS

“Software as a Service”

Companies host applications in the cloud that many users access through Internet connections. The service being sold or offered is a complete end-user application.

Developer Level

PaaS

“Platform as a Service”

Developers can design, build, and test applications that run on the cloud provider’s infrastructure and then deliver those applications to end-users from the provider’s servers.

IT Level

IaaS “Infrastructure as a Service”

System administrators obtain general processing, storage, database management and other resources and applications through the network and pay only for gets used.

 

Cloud computing has now become “shorthand” for the larger trend of computing services delivered over the Internet. From the perspective of the market analyst, IDC, cloud computing represents “an emerging IT development, deployment and delivery model, enabling real-time delivery of products, services and solutions over the Internet.” As one commentator recently characterized it: “Cloud computing — in which vast stores of information and processing resources can be tapped from afar, over the Internet, using a personal computer, cell phone or other device — holds great promise…to cut the costs, complexity and headaches of technology for companies and government agencies.”

Certainly, one of the hallmarks of cloud computing is that it enables users to interact with systems, data, and each other in a manner that minimizes concern about the underlying technology. According to the Cloud Computing Manifesto: “The key characteristics of the cloud are the ability to scale and provision computing power dynamically in a cost efficient way and the ability of the consumer (end user, organization or IT staff) to make the most of that power without having to manage the underlying complexity of the technology.”

The Economist captured the meaning of this trend in stating: “The plethora of devices wirelessly connected to the Internet will speed up a shift that is already under way: from a ‘device-centric’ to an ‘information-centric’ world….(and) as wireless technology gets better and cheaper, more and more different kinds of objects will connect directly to the cloud.” Technology guru Clay Shirky perhaps put it best when he said: “What is driving this shift is a change in perspective from seeing the computer as a box to seeing the computer as a door.” The emerging cloud computing paradigm is thus based on a “user-centric interface” that minimizes user concern over the supporting infrastructure. 

Overview 

How does this new, on-demand, information-centric model of computing fit in the world of higher education – and what does it entail for research, for collaboration and for communication in colleges and universities? This article examines the early evidence from the field and discusses the practical and institutional implications. It concludes with a Cloud Migration Strategy for college and university IT executives to follow as they seek to best integrate cloud computing into their overall IT strategies.

Cloud Computing in Universities Today

For universities, migrating to cloud-based services affords them the ability to provide improved collaboration and research capabilities, while at the same time, providing an opportunity to cut IT costs while providing the same – or better – levels of computing services. Magnified by the need to pare overhead costs at a time when public and private institutions are grappling with significant budget shortfalls, cloud computing allows universities to not just use the resources of commercial cloud providers – many of which are available to them either for free or at reduced costs. With the cloud model, students and faculty can take advantage of the ability to work and communicate from anywhere and on any device using cloud-based applications.

The benefits for higher education center upon the scalability and the economics of cloud computing. These will be discussed in subsequent sections.

Scalability of Resources             

One of the most important impacts of cloud computing will be the notion of computing power on-demand. One industry expert described this newfound power in the following manner: “When you radically democratize computing so that anyone has access at any moment to supercomputer-type capacity and all the data storage they need.” This “democratization” of computing processing and storage power could have profound implications in everything from scientific inquiry (by making no problem too big to compute) to new enterprise formation (by drastically reducing the need for upfront investment in IT resources – and the people to support and maintain them) to public agencies (by making IT more affordable and available to governments at all levels and in all locales). Thus, we may be seeing a truly new era, where through democratizing computing technology, this will help to bring “the benefits of high-powered computers and communications to all.”

Cloud computing is a revolutionary concept in IT, due to an unprecedented elasticity of resources made possible by the cloud model. In everyday use, elasticity is commonly thought of not just as the ability of an object to stretch out when needed, but to also contract as necessary (think of a rubber band or a bungee cord). In computing terms, elasticity can be defined as: “The ability of a system to dynamically acquire or release compute resources on-demand.”  Under the cloud model, organizations that need more computing power have the ability to “scale-up” resources on-demand, without having to pay a premium for that ability.  Say, for instance, that a researcher or a department has large, batch-oriented processing tasks. The individual or group can run the operations far faster than previously and at no additional costs, since using 1000 servers for one hour costs no more than using one server for 1000 hours. This unique attribute of cloud computing is a commonly referred to as “cost associativity,” and it allows for computational needs to be addressed far faster and far cheaper than in the past. In short, cloud computing gives organizations – even individual users – with unprecedented scalability.

Additionally, where in the past only the largest universities have had supercomputing capabilities cloud computing, with number-crunching capabilities available on an on-demand basis, affords researchers anywhere to scale their computing power to match the scale of their research question – bringing supercomputing to the mainstream of research. As Delic and Walker recently characterized it, cloud computing might just “enable new insights into challenging engineering, medical and social problems,” as researchers will now have newfound capabilities “to tackle peta-scale type(s) of problems” and to “carry out mega-scale simulations.” Craig A. Stewart, Associate Dean for Research Technologies at Indiana University, recently remarked that with cloud computing, “You reduce the barrier to use advanced computing facilities.” 

We have seen the reduction of barriers already paying dividends in research. At pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly, researchers needed to queue their projects to run in Lilly’s internal data center. This process to provision enough server capacity for their respective projects often meant a delay of up to two months waiting on their data run. Today however, with cloud computing, research scientists can today provision the necessary processing capacity for their projects in five minutes. This allows researchers at Lilly and other research organizations to crunch data and test theories in ways that may have gone unexplored in the prior era where they would have been dependent solely on in-house computing resources! Similar experiences are being reported at universities, both in the U.S. and abroad. For instance, at the International Institute of Information Technology in Hyderabad, India, Associate Professor Vasudeva Varma reports that the ability to run more data from more experiments more quickly has resulted in more publications for faculty in the Institute’s Search and Information Extraction Lab, which he heads.

Economics of Computing 

There is much discussion about the whole concept of “free” pricing for products and services today – and many of the email, storage, hosting, and applications that are at the forefront of cloud computing today are indeed free. The most notable of these are the product offerings of Google (Gmail, Google Apps, Google Docs, and others). Much attention has been devoted to the concept of “freeconomics,” most notably the recent book by Wired magazine editor Chris Anderson entitled, Free: The Future of a Radical Price. Most consumer-level cloud offerings would be labeled a “freemium,” which is a free version that is supported by a paid, premium version. Such freemiums are becoming an emergent business model, as they are particularly popular among online service and software companies. And, when faced with competing against “free” alternatives, older, more established companies have seen users migrate to the gratis alternative. Indeed, some see an entire “Culture of free” emerging, where from music to entertainment to news to software, people are coming to expect that free is the price they should pay.

In the corporate computing market, as software, hardware and processing power, and storage capacity become more and more commoditized, cloud computing becomes a free – or lower cost – alternative to the way things have been done for decades. As Gartner analyst Andrea DiMaio recently remarked: “Why should I bother looking for an email client to replace Outlook and coexist with my newly installed OpenOffice, if I can get email and office suite as a service with somebody like Google at a fraction of the cost and – most importantly – giving up the IT management burden too? Why are we talking about moving servers from Windows to Linux when the real question is why do we need to have our own servers in the first place?”

Already, there have been many campuses that have switched to Google or Microsoft-hosted email. Google and Microsoft host email for over four thousand colleges and universities, not just in the U.S., but in over 80 countries worldwide. In fact, almost half of all campuses are now making use of hosted email services. The switch to hosted services is paying significant dividends for the early adopting institutions. By switching to Gmail, Notre Dame reports that it saved .5 million in storage and other tech costs, while at the same time, finding that their students’ satisfaction with the campus’ email rose by over a third! Likewise, institutions (such as Arizona State and Washington State) are consistently reporting at least six figure annual savings from switching to Google or Microsoft hosted systems. Even more importantly, by switching to hosted email and productivity software, the job and focus of college IT staff can be changed. As Pepperdine University’s CIO Timothy Chester recently observed, his smaller IT staff can now be used more efficiently and be more productive, commenting that: “We want our staff working more with students and faculty and less on the nuts and bolts of delivering technology.”  

Certainly, as challenging budgetary times have been forecast to persist across higher education for the next few years – at least, there will likely be even greater pressures on colleges and universities to replace “paid” software and computing resources with “free” or low-cost cloud alternatives. From the cloud provider standpoint, Google has stated that its incentive in providing such free services to universities is to create “relationships for life” with students and faculty.

ANALYSIS

Many in higher education are coming to believe that concur with the cloud computing will be the model of the future for information technology delivery and utilization in colleges and universities. Across higher education, the cloud computing landscape should be quite active over the next few years, as we will see both coordinated efforts and “rogue” operations that will test how and where cloud computing can be effectively applied. As we have seen, colleges and universities will in many instances lead the way. These entities will continue to do so, based on their need for computing power on demand and for providing the types of ready – and in many cases free – IT resources – to their faculty and students. With pressure to reduce the fixed costs of higher education – and IT being a very rich target – the shift to cloud may be more forced in some cases than may be dictated by the on-the-ground circumstances. Indeed, some of the most exciting uses and best practices for cloud computing could well come from the world of higher education.

We have seen predictions that due to the cost and operational benefits of cloud computing, more and more companies will find themselves outsourcing most – if not all – of their IT to cloud providers, creating what has been termed as “serverless organizations.”  Indeed, it has been predicted that organizations of all sizes will find it beneficial to concentrate on and optimize their business processes by outsourcing the IT function. So, why not “serverless universities?” By outsourcing almost all of IT and all data storage/handling – this may be a viable proposition for colleges and universities, particularly as cloud offerings expand and are made more secure and reliable.

As we have seen in this article, there are certainly discussions and embryonic efforts underway – both in the U.S. and abroad – as public and private universities examine how to best made the cloud-concept work for they and their students and faculty. Universities are beginning to work collaboratively in the cloud to pool their IT resources. Already, this has occurred in Virginia and North Carolina. In the Commonwealth, a dozen colleges and universities have come together to form the Virginia Virtual Computing Lab. Such efforts allow institutions to cut their IT costs by reducing their need for software licensing, for upgrade capabilities, and for perhaps maintaining their own data centers, all while improving the IT resources for their faculty and students. Already, by shifting to cloud offerings, North Carolina State University has been able to dramatically lower expenditures on software licenses and simultaneously, reduce the campus’ IT staff from 15 to 3 full-time employees.

Additionally, there have been calls for the federal government to take the lead to create a universal cloud computing environment, to be available for use by all colleges and universities nationwide. In doing so, proponents argue for the economic and educational benefits that such a resource would provide, as it would democratize computing technology and “level the playing field” so all students and faculty could have access to the scale and type of computing power enjoyed only by elite institutions.

CONCLUSION

A Cloud Migration Strategy for Higher Education

It is important to bear in mind that, as one commentator recently put it, “cloud computing is a tool, not a strategy.” IT leaders in higher education will thus be well-advised to take a programmed, assessment of how cloud computing can fit into their overall IT strategy, in support of the mission and overall strategy of their institution. This should take the form of a 6-step process, which this author has labeled as the Cloud Migration Strategy.

The Cloud Migration Strategy begins with learning about the basics of cloud computing – through attending seminars, networking, talking with vendors, and reading articles such as this one. Given that cloud computing represents a new paradigm in computing technology, it will be important for technology transfer to occur – the “techies” in and outside of the institution will need to go the extra mile to educate and inform the “non-techie” amongst their ranks and constituencies as to the merits and value of cloud computing. It will be especially important to devote sufficient funding for research to establish how cloud computing is working – or not working – in various areas in the university and across institutions, so as to ground policies and develop best practices in regards to the use of cloud computing.

Then, IT executives should conduct an honest assessment of their institution’s present IT needs, structure, and capacity utilization. In a cloud computing environment, where resources can be added – or subtracted – based on needs and demand, it will be critical for IT managers to honestly assess their institution’s IT baseline for faculty, students and operations. In looking at data center utilization, it will be vital to look at what resources are used all the time and are necessary for day-to-day operations to establish a baseline for internally-hosted operations. Only then can one look at whether to continue to host “excess” capacity in the data center or to contract for cloud services as needed to scale-up to meet demands for greater amounts of computing resources.

University IT leaders should then pick one area – even one specific project – to “cloud pilot” and assess their ability to manage and bring such a project to fruition. As with any new technology, we are seeing a great deal of pure experimentation with cloud computing – “science project” like work for the most part up till now. All of us who use the Internet are experimenting with cloud applications in our daily lives – from Twittering to Gmail to using photo-sharing sites. In the same way, we are seeing organizations conducting cloud computing trials – what one writer termed as “science experiments” in the use of the technology. Such efforts that are far away from their core IT operations and many times on (or trying to connect) the periphery of the organization. . Many times – even in the public sector and especially on campuses, these experiments may be “rogue” operations – taken on by individuals and units to test the utility of the technology. These are important efforts, and they should be supported – and reported within and outside the institution – so that others in the IT and the wider community can learn of the successes – and the downsides – of operating in the clouds. Thus, it will be vitally important to share both “best practices” and “lessons learned” in cloud computing. Indeed, many predict that such “science projects” in large and small organizations will drive the eventual acceptance and adoption of cloud computing.

After the internal assessment and external outreach stemming from the pilot effort, they should then conduct an overall IT cloud-readiness assessment to determine if they have data and applications that could readily move to a cloud environment and if a public/private/hybrid cloud would be suitable or useable for these purposes and rank-order potential projects. Finally, it is time to begin a cloud rollout strategy – gaining buy-in from both institutional leadership and IT staffers and communicating with both internal and external stakeholders as to the goals, progress, and costs/benefits of each cloud project. This is where the cloud goes from being a test effort to become more mainstream in the way the university manages its data, its operations and its people. It becomes part of “normal” operations, just as other prior tech innovations (from telephony to fax to the Internet to email and to social media) have become IT tools, used in support of the institution’s IT strategy and more importantly, its overall strategy.

At this point, the process enters the final stage – call it “continuous cloud improvement” – to where the institution continues to move appropriate data and applications to the cloud – and perhaps even back from the cloud to internally-hosted operations, if necessary, based on a thorough and continuous assessment of the appropriate use of cloud technologies for their particular university.

Implications for Higher Education

The shift to more cloud-based applications will indeed bring newfound capabilities to communicate, collaborate and conduct research to university faculty, staff and students. However, it will also necessitate a flurry of policy decisions that will need to be made and operational rules that will need to be implemented. For instance, there will have to be IT policy decisions made as to who can access what files and what type of access they will have (i.e. read-only, editing access). The shift will also necessitate institutions to examine how cloud computing will secure and procure their computing environment.

Indeed, one of the principal concerns about cloud computing whether it is secure and reliable.  Unfortunately, worries over cloud reliability and availability – or specifically, the lack thereof when such instances arise – are not just theoretical, as there have been well-publicized outages of many of the most popular public cloud services.  And, as one industry analyst astutely pointed-out, when cloud service outages or inaccessibility occur, “most of the risk and blame if something goes wrong will fall directly on the shoulders of IT — and not on the cloud computing service providers.”

Security concerns may indeed impede the shift to cloud-based models. As with prior shifts in information technology with the advent of the Internet and the Web, the introduction of e-mail, and the explosion of social media, their growth and adoption rates have been slowed by initial fears – some justified and some very unjustified – over security concerns and the loss of control over data and operations. Certainly, privacy and security questions will need to be addressed as institutional data and applications move into a cloud environment. Indeed, analogies have been drawn between the advent of cloud computing today with the introduction of wireless technologies a decade ago. Finally, security is undoubtedly a hard metric to quantify. And, all too often, from the perspective of Bernard Golden and other observers, the IT community has a somewhat damaging tendency to treating all risks – whatever the real nature of them – as the very worst case scenario and not judging the true impact – and likelihood – of their occurrence.

Finally, universities’ often outdated and byzantine procurement rules and regulations, some of which may even preclude the use of cloud computing in select instances, will need to be changed to be more cloud-friendly and encourage the savings and efficiencies that can come from this new model of IT. There will also need to be changes made in not just the language, but in the mindset of contracting for computing services. For while IT administrators look at capacity and systems, end users look to performance. As Joab Jackson recently put it, the key metric will now become: “When I sit down at that computer, do I see the functionality I need?”

In time, we may look back on the latter portion of this first decade of the new millennium as a true turning point in the history of computing. The transition however will take years, perhaps even decades, and we’re not close to a day when we will simply have computing easily at our fingertips. However, all signs point to a true, campus-led revolution in computing.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Biography

David C. Wyld (dwyld.kwu@gmail.com) is the Robert Maurin Professor of Management at Southeastern Louisiana University in Hammond, Louisiana. He is a management consultant, researcher/writer, and executive educator. His blog, Wyld About Business, can be viewed at http://wyld-business.blogspot.com/. He also serves as the Director of the Reverse Auction Research Center (http://reverseauctionresearch.blogspot.com/), a hub of research and news in the expanding world of competitive bidding. Dr. Wyld also maintains compilations of works he has helped his students to turn into editorially-reviewed publications at the following sites:

Management Concepts (http://toptenmanagement.blogspot.com/)

Book Reviews (http://wyld-about-books.blogspot.com/) and

Travel and International Foods (http://wyld-about-food.blogspot.com/).                

Written by David Wyld
Professor of Management, Southeastern Louisiana University

More University Articles

Be a Procurement Hero in a Time of Excellent Budgetary Desires: Maximizing Acquiring Energy Amongst Colleges And Universities By way of Reverse Auctions

Nowadays, budget challenges are at the forefront of concern for all in increased education. Here’s a roadmap for a procurement revolution for colleges and universities. By means of the use of reverse auctions, greater education executives can make certain their institution’s procurement operation is able to get the most “bang for the buck” and maximize the worth of every single purchase by benchmarking very best practices in the private and public sector.

There is been considerably talk of late – on sports radio, the four-letter network, and on sports pages and blogs – about key colleges and universities coming with each other to form significant “super-conferences” for sports – namely the 800 pound gorilla that is significant college football. When the dust settles, alliances and rivalries that have been in place for decades might well be put aside for yes, you guessed it, the almighty dollar.

Whether we see “football Armageddon” this year – or in a couple of years or even a decade from now, one particular thing is for certain. We have observed that yes, campus leaders are – at their core – businesspeople. They have to be! It is crucial that they be superb managers – and leaders – in order to have their institutions survive and thrive in an more and more complicated, hugely competitive and rapidly changing globe of greater education right now – all although facing main budgetary pressures from a loss of both state funding and donor assistance, while in a lot of circumstances seeing their endowments plunge in worth as properly. Yes, they are academic institutions, and yes, they are non-profit. Even so, no university president or college provost these days – whether or not their home discipline is accounting, biology, or philosophy – has to be able to think and act like the leader of a major corporation – a single that may have as a lot of employees – and the revenue and expenses – of a Fortune 500 company!

With all the focus of late on the enterprise of school sports, we have come to genuinely appreciate that yes, the institution does have to balance its balance sheet and squeeze out at least to the break-even point on its revenue statement. If not, the long term can be complete of “unpleasantness” – spending freezes, employee furloughs and layoffs, discontinued programs – bad stuff! So, if a school can decrease its procurement fees, this can free-up dollars to retain faculty, to preserve services, and to make sure that the top quality of the institution is upheld – even in the face of dire economic circumstances.

Recently, we have seen an increasing quantity of colleges and universities close to the country – mirroring the very best practices of key firms, state governments, and even the federal sector – to increasingly make use of reverse auctions in their procurement. What is a reverse auction? Feel of it as eBay – but in reverse! A reverse auction is a approach in which a buyer solicits bids from interested sellers, and these sellers have the chance to submit a single bid, or multiple bids that reduce in value. So even though we normally think of bidders bidding up the price to be paid in a forward auction to get one thing, this operates virtually in reverse – as bidders are bidding down the price at which they will promote an item to a getting organization. Whilst a reverse auction can be held in a physical event, most reverse auctions take place through a web or method-based mostly electronic interface – an electronic marketplace.

Above the past decade, the proof is really clear – reverse auctions can create cost savings on almost everything you acquire – from paper clips and computers to yes, bulk purchases of utility energy. They have turn into a established tool for Fortune 500 businesses and big governmental purchasers, and now, with the advent of net-primarily based, user-friendly interfaces, in several instances, an online e-marketplace can be the simplest – and fastest – way to attain new possible suppliers and make sure that you are maximizing the effectiveness of its procurement dollars for organizations of all sizes around the country and around the planet. By partnering with a reverse auction provider, organizations can really accomplish substantial procurement financial savings – not just in dollar cost outlays, but in vital metrics this kind of as time and manpower – all with a approach that is probably to be much more transparent and much less topic to bid protests and other legal problems than common operational methods.

And, for public sector agencies, there are a number of private sector partners to choose from, such as Co-exprise (http://www.co-exprise.com/), FedBid (http://www.fedbid.com/), and Procurex (http://www.procurexinc.com/), each of whom are skilled in partnering with governmental agencies to make 10-20% financial savings – perhaps far more – and in some cases, a lot far more – on your acquisition dollars.

While reverse auction activity is rapidly growing in the federal government and at the state and regional degree as well, it is just now starting to take-off with institutions of higher studying. Recently, Procurex helped a Midwestern university save 5,000 on a main acquire of coal, creating these savings in an very competitive electronic auction procedure that drove the institution’s price tag point down by obtaining 7 likely suppliers problem 73 bids in just a 45-minute prolonged event! There have also been person institutions, such as Emory University in Atlanta, that have integrated reverse auctions into their buying processes to the point exactly where electronic auctions have turn into a “first-choice” for procuring all manner of goods and solutions. Certainly, we have now even seen systems of institutions, such as the military academies and the University of Tennessee system’s work with FedBid, Inc., a Vienna, Virginia-primarily based leader in the delivering reverse auction solutions to governments at all levels. And FedBid’s model is to perform with institutions on buys as tiny as ,000, which means that most of a college or universities buying could – and possibly should – be competed by means of its electronic marketplace. And not just to make confident that an institution is obtaining the absolute lowest market place price for the myriad goods, commodities and services required for any key consumer-focused organization to operate nowadays.

Finally, with all the attention on the University of Nebraska – and perhaps Notre Dame – joining the Huge ten Conference for football (and oh yes, the other sports as properly), the Huge ten has led the way as a model for aggregating acquiring not just across individual campuses and entire systems, but amongst them as properly. For over half a century, member institutions of the Massive ten – plus the University of Chicago – (see Table 1) have cooperated on all manner of cross-institutional analysis tasks and student support initiatives by way of the Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC) (http://www.cic.net/).

Table 1 – CIC Member Universities

University of Chicago

University of Illinois

Indiana University

University of Iowa

University of Michigan

Michigan State University

University of Minnesota

Northwestern University

Ohio State University

Pennsylvania State University

Purdue University

University of Wisconsin-Madison

CIC member institutions have also cooperated to pool their buying electrical power and save precious budgetary dollars by means of conduct joint reverse auction-based procurements. All told, the CIC Buying Consortium has produced aggregate cost savings in excess of eight million dollars, across a wide selection of products, like:

· IT equipment

· office suppliers

· furniture

· copy paper

· audio-visual equipment

· energy.

Primarily based on benefits like these, The CIC recently announced that it was extending its contract with Procurex by way of 2013.

Evaluation

It is really clear that increased education budgets will be under intense strain for the subsequent coming years, with numerous predicting no finish in sight for the state price range crises that have taken a enormous toll on public colleges and universities. Private institutions have fared even worse in numerous circumstances, with falling endowments and a declining pool of applicants – with the capability to spend – or even to get fiscal help.

So, for all the attention the “super-conference” debate has brought to the income side of the equation for school and university administrations across the land for the largest, brand name, flagship-degree universities, the real concern for all greater education executives is how to cut charges at their institution – even if it is 1 that does not make SportsCenter on a regular basis – if ever. For the procurement departments at hundreds of extremely very good, but non-football energy colleges, this is a time of counting paper clips and producing sure that each and every dollar and each penny of funding gets the most “bang for the buck.” So now is most undoubtedly the time for all in charge of greater ed buying to take a 1st – or yet another appear – at how you can greatest employ reverse auctions to turn into a “Procurement Hero” in this era of big spending budget crises! And for college presidents, university chancellors, and members of governing boards, why not inquire the “why aren’t we doing this” query to get your staff moving on this – yesterday!

Right here at the Reverse Auction Investigation Center (http://reverseauctionresearch.blogspot.com/), we’re particularly focused on how all colleges and universities can very best make use of reverse auctions in institutional procurement operations and maximize the worth of each and every single purchasing dollar. If you’re interested in studying a lot more – or if you have a story to share about your own experiences making use of reverse auctions in a larger ed atmosphere, please get in touch with me at dwyld.kwu@gmail.com.

About the Author:

David C. Wyld (dwyld.kwu@gmail.com) is the Director of the Reverse Auction Investigation Center (http://reverseauctionresearch.blogspot.com/). He at the moment serves as the Robert Maurin Professor of Management at Southeastern Louisiana University in Hammond, Louisiana. He is a noted professional on reverse auctions and e-procurement topics, getting widely published on the topic and a recognized expert/consultant in the area. He has been named among the Rising Stars in Federal Info Technology by Federal Pc Week.

Written by David Wyld
Professor of Management, Southeastern Louisiana University

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QS World University Rankings by Subject

Here are the lists of QS globe university rankings in all subjects under Arts and Humanities Rankings:

Leading 10 Universities, Topic: English Language and Literature

Harvard University, United States, 98.8.

University of Oxford, United Kingdom, 94.3

University of Cambridge, United Kingdom, 89.9

University of California, Berkeley (UCB), United States, 85.5

Yale University, United States, 80.4

Columbia University, United States, 70.five

University of Toronto, Canada, 72.two

Stanford University, United States, 70.

University of California, Log Angeles (UCLA), United States, 66.9

University of Chicago, United States, 66.

Leading ten Universities, Subject: Modern Languages Rankings

Harvard University, United States, 100.

University of Oxford, United Kingdom, 90.8

University of Cambridge, United Kingdom, 86.7

University of California, Berkeley (UCB), United States, 80.5

Yale University, United States, 73.2

Australian National University, Australia, 68.four

Cornell University, United States, 68.two

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), United States, 68.

Massachusetts Institute of Technologies (MIT, United States, 65.4

9.   University of Toronto, Canada, 65.4

Top 10 Universities, Subject: History Rankings

Harvard University, United States, 94.7

University of Oxford, United Kingdom, 84.four

University of Cambridge, United Kingdom, 82.6

University of California, Berkeley (UCB), United States, 73.two

Yale University, United States, 73.1

Princeton University, United States, 68.9

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), United States, 67.7

Columbia University, United States, 62.two

University of Chicago, United States, 62.

Stanford University, United States, 61.3

Leading ten Universities, Subject: Philosophy Rankings

Harvard University, United States, 94.three

University of Oxford, United Kingdom, 93.6

University of Cambridge, United Kingdom, 90.eight

University of California, Berkeley (UCB), United States, 84.six

Princeton University, United States, 76.two

Australian National University, Australia, 73.eight

University of Toronto, Canada, 71.four

Stanford University, United States, 70.1

Yale University, United States, 67.two

University of Chicago, United States, 63.3

Best 10 Universities, Subject: Geography &amp Region Scientific studies Rankings

University of Oxford, United Kingdom, 87.two

University of California, Berkeley (UCB), United States, 85.four

Harvard University, United States, 83.7

University of Cambridge, United Kingdom, 83.five

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), United States, 71.two

Australian National University, Australia, 69.eight

Stanford University, United States, 68.three

Yale University, United States, 67.6

University of Chicago, United States, 65.1

National University of Singapore (NUS), Singapore, 65.

Leading 10 Universities, Subject: Linguistics Rankings

University of Cambridge, United Kingdom, 94.

University of Oxford, United Kingdom, 92.four

Harvard University, United States, 91.eight

University of California, Berkeley (UCB), United States, 79.8

Stanford University, United States, 79.1

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), United States, 76.5

University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom, 74.7

Massachusetts Institute of Technological innovation (MIT), United States, 73.six

McGill University, Canada, 65.6

Australian National University, Australia, 65.

For a lot more information, go to the internet site of best universities. 

Written by marcopaolo24
Freelance writer

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University Evaluations – Delivering Correct Details About The Distinct Universities

College students have to face the challenging circumstance of choosing a university just soon after passing out of college from the several choices obtainable. To assist them in such cases, they can go by way of the university critiques featured by many online portals. The tall claims of the various universities and the appealing promotional campaigns run by them tends to make the approach of choice producing even tougher. They also supply really tempting discounts and deals. But for a student it is crucial to preserve his priorities straight in his search for the best university. If he is interested in sports, then it is essential to take into account the sporting infrastructure of the specific university. Some universities may possibly have a good academic culture, but its sports infrastructure could not be up to the mark. It is also essential for a student to take issues such as drug culture into account. If you browse the websites of the universities of your choice, all you will get are the rosy photographs, whilst the true and details and figures will be hidden. Correct data about a distinct university can only be provided by the reviews of universities that are featured by the various on the web portals. As they have a fair grading method, you will get a clear idea about the rankings of different universities. Whether or not you want information on a massive university or a neighborhood college, reviews of university will give you comprehensive and precise information.

It is not achievable for a student to go through extremely magazine and newspaper in order to decide on the appropriate university. The process is not only daunting, but also unattainable. Thanks to the world wide web, numerous internet sites delivering accurate data about the several universities are preserving an on the web presence. You can uncover reviews of very a number of universities. The comparison of fees, courses and so on. will actually assist you to select the very best university.

From school photographs and films to school internships, you can find a lot of beneficial stuff on these portals. They attribute articles written by the college students presently studying in these universities to know completely about the university he/she wants to join.

College students have to face the difficult scenario of deciding on a university just right after passing out of school from the several alternatives accessible. To help them in this kind of cases, they can go by way of the university reviews featured by several on-line portals. The tall claims of the diverse universities and the attractive promotional campaigns run by them makes the approach of selection generating even tougher. They also offer you quite tempting discounts and deals. But for a student it is critical to keep his priorities straight in his search for the very best university. If he is interested in sports, then it is important to take into account the sporting infrastructure of the certain university. Some universities may have a very good academic culture, but its sports infrastructure may not be up to the mark. It is also essential for a student to take issues this kind of as drug culture into account. If you browse the web sites of the universities of your alternative, all you will get are the rosy photos, while the genuine and details and figures will be hidden. Correct information about a distinct university can only be offered by the critiques of universities that are featured by the several online portals. As they have a fair grading method, you will get a clear notion about the rankings of distinct universities. Regardless of whether you want information on a big university or a community college, reviews of university will give you comprehensive and precise knowledge.

It is not feasible for a student to go by way of extremely magazine and newspaper in order to decide on the right university. The job is not only daunting, but also impossible. Thanks to the web, many websites supplying genuine data about the several universities are sustaining an on-line presence. You can find evaluations of really a amount of universities. The comparison of costs, courses and so forth. will actually aid you to pick the best university.

From school photos and films to school internships, you can uncover a lot of beneficial stuff on these portals. They characteristic content articles written by the students at the moment learning in those universities to know totally about the university he/she desires to join.

Written by SteveShankar

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What IS University ???

Definition

The original Latin word ”universitas” was utilised at the time of emergence of urban town life and medieval guild, to describe specialised “associations of students and teachers with collective legal rights typically guaranteed by charters issued by princes, prelates, or the towns in which they had been positioned.”The authentic Latin word referred to degree-granting institutions of finding out in western europe, where this form of legal organisation was prevalent, and from where the institution spread close to the globe. For non-connected educational institutions of antiquity which did not stand in the tradition of the university and to which the term is only loosely and retrospectively applied, see ancient centres of larger learning.

Academic freedom

An essential concept in the definition of a university is the notion of academic freedom. The first documentary evidence of this comes from early in the life of the initial university. The University of Bologna adopted an academic charter, the Constitutio Habita, in 1158 or 1155, which guaranteed the proper of a traveling scholar to unhindered passage in the interests of education. Nowadays this is claimed as the origin of “academic freedom”. This is now extensively recognised internationally – on 18 September 1988 430 university rectors signed the Magna Charta Universitatum, marking the 900th anniversary of Bologna’s foundation. The number of universities signing the Magna Charta Universitatum continues to develop, drawing from all components of the world.

Prior to their formal establishment, many medieval universities were run for hundreds of years as Christian cathedral schools or monastic colleges(Scholae monasticae), in which monks and nuns taught classes proof of these instant forerunners of the later university at numerous locations dates back to the 6th century AD. The University of Salerno followed by the University of Constantinople (founded by Theodosius II in 425 with 31 chairs),Preslav Literary School and Ohrid Literary School in the Bulgarian Empire, established in the 9th century, had been the very first institutions of greater education in Medieval Europe, thereby forming aspect of the pre-history of university education.

The 1st universities with formally established guilds in Europe were the University of Bologna (1088), the University of Paris (c. 1150, later related with the Sorbonne), the University of Oxford (1167), the University of Palencia (1208), the University of Cambridge (1209), the University of Salamanca(1218), the University of Montpellier (1220), the University of Padua (1222), the University of Naples Federico II (1224), the University of Toulouse(1229).

The University of Bologna began as a law school teaching the ius gentium or Roman law of peoples which was in demand across Europe for those defending the appropriate of incipient nations against empire and church. Bologna’s special claim to Alma Mater Studiorum is based on its autonomy, its awarding of degrees, and other structural arrangements, producing it the oldest continuously operating institutionindependent of kings, emperors or any sort of direct religious authority.

The conventional date of 1088, or 1087 according to some, records when a certain Irnerius commences teaching Emperor Justinian’s 6th century codification of Roman law, the Corpus Iuris Civilis, lately discovered at Pisa. Lay students arrived in the city from a lot of lands getting into into a contract to obtain this knowledge, organising themselves into ‘Learning Nations’ of Hungarians, Greeks, North Africans, Arabs, Franks, Germans, Iberians and so forth. The students “had all the electrical power … and dominated the masters”.

In Europe, young guys proceeded to university when they had completed their research of the trivium–the preparatory arts of grammar, rhetoric and dialectic or logic–and the quadrivium: arithmetic,geometry, music, and astronomy. (See Degrees of the University of Oxford for the historical past of how the trivium and quadrivium created in relation to degrees, particularly in anglophone universities).

Universities became popular all over Europe, as rulers and city governments started to produce them to satisfy a European thirst for expertise, and the belief that society would advantage from the scholarly knowledge generated from these institutions. Princes and leaders of city governments perceived the possible advantage of getting a scholarly expertise develop with the capability to handle difficult troubles and obtain desired ends. The emergence of humanism was important to this understanding of the feasible utility of universities as well as the revival of interest in knowledge gained from ancient Greek texts.

The rediscovery of Aristotle’s works – much more than 3000 pages of it would eventually be translated – fuelled a spirit of inquiry into normal processes that had already begun to emerge in the 12th century. Some scholars feel that this these performs represented one particular of the most important document discoveries in Western intellectual historical past. Richard Dales, for instance, calls the discovery of Aristotle’s works “a turning point in the history of Western thought.” After Aristotle re-emerged, a neighborhood of scholars, primarily communicating in Latin, accelerated the approach and practice of attempting to reconcile the thoughts of Greek antiquity, and specifically concepts connected to understanding the organic globe, with those of the church. The efforts of this “scholasticism” had been focused on applying Aristotelian logic and thoughts about natural processes to biblical passages and trying to prove the viability of these passages through purpose. This became the main mission of lecturers, and the expectation of students.

The university culture created in a different way in northern Europe than it did in the south, although the northern (mainly Germany, France and Wonderful Britain) and southern universities (mostly Italy) did have a lot of elements in common. Latin was the language of the university, used for all texts, lectures, disputations and examinations. Professors lectured on the books of Aristotle for logic, natural philosophy, and metaphysics while Hippocrates, Galen, and Avicenna were used for medicine. Outside of these commonalities, great differences separated north and south, primarily in subject matter. Italian universities focused on law and medicine, although the northern universities focused on the arts and theology. There had been distinct variations in the good quality of instruction in these regions which were congruent with their concentrate, so scholars would travel north or south based mostly on their interests and signifies. There was also a difference in the types of degrees awarded at these universities. English, French and German universities typically awarded bachelor’s degrees, with the exception of degrees in theology, for which the doctorate was more frequent. Italian universities awarded primarily doctorates. The distinction can be attributed to the intent of the degree holder after graduation – in the north the focus tended to be on acquiring teaching positions, while in the south college students often went on to specialist positions. The structure of Northern Universities tended to be modeled soon after the program of faculty governance developed at the University of Paris. Southern universities tended to be patterned soon after the student-controlled model begun at the University of Bologna.

Though the university is extensively regarded as “the European institution par excellence” in terms of its origins and traits, some scholars have argued that early medieval universities had been influenced by the religious Madrasah schools in Al-Andalus, the Emirate of Sicily, and the Middle East (throughout the Crusades). Other scholars oppose this view and argue that there is no real proof of the transmission of Arab scholarly techniques discernible in medieval universities.

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