Canada Wide Science Fair

IT Projects – how does the University decide?

Cartoon people holding jigsaw pieces https://www.google.ca/search?hl=en&site=imghp&tbm=isch&source=hp&biw=1251&bih=687&q=project+managment&oq=project+managment&gs_l=img.3..0i10l10.3444.10120.0.14050.27.16.8.3.4.0.111.863.14j2.16.0....0...1ac.1.35.img..0.27.894.GBMmu68k1k4#facrc=_&imgdii=_&imgrc=PZJoJycWJ2xUzM%253A%3B1r9YRcbd4nyrWM%3Bhttp%253A%252F%252Fwww.globalnpsolutions.com%252Fwp-content%252Fuploads%252F2012%252F04%252Fcartoon-of-mgmt.jpg%3Bhttp%253A%252F%252Fwww.globalnpsolutions.com%252Fservices%252Fnpd-resources%252Fwhite-papers%252Fproduct-vs-project-management%252F%3B1210%3B1104From the University’s three-year-long Enterprise Recruitment and Retention Program, which includes the Student Portal project, the Business Intelligence project, and Strategic Roadmap project, to the three-month-long Canada Wide Science Fair wireless project, Information Technology Services is constantly juggling the number, length, complexity, importance and costs of IT-related projects for the U of L.

In order to determine which projects provide the best value to the University, an IT Projects Committee has been struck to tackle these large and critical decisions. “This is huge – it’s a very big step for IT,” says Chris Roberts, Manager for IT Services’ Project Management Office. “Prior to this, we had to use a ‘best effort’ approach to deciding which projects we had the capacity for, but this is obviously not ideal.”

Purchasing AtTask, a project portfolio management tool, provided a concrete solution to corralling and tracking all IT project requests into one central location. The next logical step was to form a committee to evaluate and prioritize all requests coming to ITS. “Leveraging this tool will help us report and sustain all projects by balancing resources with demand,” Roberts adds.

The IT Projects Committee, which will meet monthly, comprises representatives from across campus: Chris Horbachewski (VP Advancement), Chris Nicol (University Librarian), Charles Jorgenson (Acting Registrar), David Hinger (Director, Teaching Centre), Ken McInnes (Executive Director, HR), Carrie Takeyasu (Executive Director, Financial Services), TJ Hanson (Executive Director, Facilities), Jim Booth (Executive Director, Ancillary Services), along with IT Services reps: Mark Humphries (CIO), Darren Schell (Manager, Transformation), and Chris Roberts.

Roberts says the Committee is hoping to start its intake process later this spring, but further communication and details will follow.

 

 

IT Services update for week of May 13, 2013

Critical Services (Banner, Moodle, Wireless, Internet, Telephony)

One of our commercial internet providers had a problem yesterday morning at about 1:00am, and our systems automatically and seamlessly failed over to our backup provider.  Service was returned to our primary provided at about 4:00pm.  There was no indication that any of our clients was impacted through these transitions.

The graphs below show our traffic being switched to the secondary provider (bottom), and then back to our primary connections (top and middle.)

cyberaoutagemay2013-2

All other critical services functioning normally.

Canada-wide Science Fair

IT Services was heavily involved in supporting the Canada-wide Science Fair that was hosted on campus over the past week.  We deployed a high-density wireless network in the gymnasium area, and provided wireless access to delegates who were staying in our student residences as well.  We saw over 20,000 accesses of the wireless network on Wednesday alone.  We also provided a number of workstations and printers for use of the judges.

All reports from CWSF organizers indicate that everything went very smoothly, and all the technology performed exactly as expected.

Wireless access points installed on CWSF booths:

wifitree

Computers installed for delegate and judge use:

workstations

IT Services update for week of April 29, 2013

 

CRITICAL SERVICES: (Banner, Moodle, Wireless, Internet, Telephony)

  • All critical services functioning normally.
  • A SPAM attack on Saturday April 27 caused intermittent problems for users trying to access university services from off-campus.  Corrective measures were implemented over the weekend.

KPI SPOTLIGHT:

Test Centre – Final Exam Success

The Centre supervised approximately 4000 student exams during the final exam period, averaging 88 exams per hour on the two busiest days, and peaking at 776 exams on the last day.

Test Centre graph #1

The Centre experienced the highest attendance at exams from opening at 10 am until 3 pm.

Test Centre graph #2

SERVICE IMPROVEMENTS:

Canada-wide Science Fair

Preparations to support the fair are in their final stages.  A detailed activity plan will guide installation and support work starting Monday May 6 through to the end of the event.  Wireless services, mobile devices, and support processes are tested ready to be commissioned for the event.

IT Services update for week of April 8, 2013

CRITICAL SERVICES: (Banner, Moodle, Wireless, Internet, Telephony)

Apart from the Moodle problems identified last week and corrected on Saturday April 6, all critical services are functioning normally.

SERVICE IMPROVEMENTS:

IT Services staff visited the Calgary campus to update technology in the administrative areas.  This included the installation new desktop PCs, collaboration software, and updates to the ID card production station.  The feedback we received from the staff and Calgary Campus Manager was very positive.

Calgary Equipment

Canada Wide Science Fair Preparations

We will be testing our “wifi trees” at the Regional Science Fair that is being held this weekend.  As mentioned previously, these trees will allow us to create a high density zone of wifi access in the First Choice Savings Centre during the Canada Wide Science Fair in May.

Wifi tree

 

IT Services Weekly Update

Critical Services (Banner, Moodle, Wireless, Internet)

All services functioning normally.

KPI Spotlight

The Testing Centre has been seeing higher volume with midterm exams in full swing.  Some relevant statistics are provided below.

Last week (Feb 23 – Mar 1):

Number of students processed:              98-150 per day avg
Peak time of day:                                         1pm,  3pm, and 7pm peaks
Average exam duration:                            20-50 minutes
Total exams approx:                                   750

This week (Mar 2 – Mar 8):

Number of students processed:              140-220 per day avg
Peak time of day:                                         1pm to 3pm
Average exam duration:                            60-90 minutes
Total exams approx:                                   1100

Service Improvements

We have recently purchased and installed quiet keyboards in the Testing Centre and level nine of the Library.  This significantly reduces the noise in these facilities, making it easier for students to concentrate on their examinations and studies.

quiet_keyboard

Canada Wide Science Fair

The University is hosting the Canada Wide Science Fair on May 11, 2013, which will bring students and judges from across Canada to our campus.  All of the judging will be conducted using Blackberry Playbook tablets, so having adequate wifi capacity is critical to the success of the event.  IT Services has constructed seven “wifi trees” (see below) which allow us to position wifi access points to provide optimal coverage and capacity within the 1st Choice Savings Centre.

wifi_tree