SPECIAL REPORT
of the
UNIVERSITY COMPUTER AND ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS COMMITTEE
CONCERNING THE BOARD OF HIGHER EDUCATIONS
SUPPORT OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY IN HIGHER EDUCATION
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The rapid growth of information technology (IT) and pressures for
its use in education necessitate a substantial investment in learning and
infrastructure by the University Community.
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The
current state of pedagogy on our campus that includes IT depends upon the
equipment available in existing classrooms, the internet connectivity of
our community, and the training of our faculty and students in taking advantage
of IT. Application of available technology in teaching is often avoided
due to the heroic efforts needed to assemble the equipment in our less
well equiped classrooms. The slow increase in the number of well
equiped classrooms is a bottleneck to the general faculty's progress in
developing pedagogy.
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While
the Committee recognizes that revenue issues may dictate the rate at which
IT can be applied broadly within all the disciplines that need it, it believes
that the current focus on existing IT programs does not address the broader
objectives which the Board of Higher wishes to address in encouraging promulgation
of IT on the State's higher educational campuses. The Committee urges
that the current emphasis on maintaining support for the focused IT programs
on our UMass campus be broadened to include an emphasis on increasing the
number of IT-ready classrooms available to the general university community
and providing a revenue stream that will provide appropriate computer equipment
for all faculty and students who need them.
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We particularly
need to emphasise that the appropriate hardware needed by each faculty,
and the students they serve, may not be consistant with a common solution
for the entire campus. A flexible approach to providing the technology
to different disciplines must be combined with an understanding that all
disciplines must be served by any mandate to increase IT. Some teaching
pedagogy may require substantial investments in university owned and maintained
equipment such as digital projectors and information servers. Improvements
in requisite equipment may put unreasonable pressures on some economic
segments of our student body which may call for special mechanisms to maintain
equity.
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Therefore,
the Committee recommends that the Faculty Senate adopt the following resolution
which was passed by the Committee on April 10, 2001:
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WHEREAS
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The
need for information technology (IT) infrastucture has become fundamental
to the advancement of the academic enterprise and the current structure
has resulted in:
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(1) inequities, including that not all faculty have access to
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a) desktop or laptop computers,
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b) training in use of computers,
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c) classrooms equiped for IT;
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and
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(2) inequities to students across the University, including
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a) unequal IT resources based on discipline,
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b) unequal access to IT based on housing, and
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c) unequal access to IT based on financial need;
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BE IT RESOLVED THAT
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The students and faculty of every discipline of the University community
should benefit from planned improvements in IT infrastructure.
MOTION That the Faculty Senate endorse the resolution passed by
the University Computer and Electronic Communications Committee that would
provide all disciplines of the University community with improvements in
information technology.