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Campus Administrative Systems

Campus Administrative Systems. David Cook Information Technology Services dcook@austin.utexas.edu. Objective. Understand administrative systems and the responsibilities of the IT professional in this area. Overview. What are some example administrative systems?

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Campus Administrative Systems

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  1. Campus Administrative Systems David Cook Information Technology Services dcook@austin.utexas.edu

  2. Objective Understand administrative systems and the responsibilities of the IT professional in this area

  3. Overview • What are some example administrative systems? • *DEFINE Inbox Web and 3270 interface • Advisor’s Toolkit • Technology Resource Account Center (TRAC) • What I Owe • Application development standards • Platforms and Tools • Data Access • Output • Training • Project IQ

  4. Online Transcripts Interactive Degree Audit (IDA) Registration (ROSE) Registration Waitlisting Study Abroad *NRRECS *ADM Course Schedule Catalogs Student Government Elections Be a Longhorn Texas Common App Electronic Transcript Server Student Information Systems • Some of the applications SIS supports:

  5. Purchasing Accounts payable Accounts receivable Budget Payroll Inventory Appointments Human Resources *DEFINE Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) - *DEFINE *DEFINE information: http://www.utexas.edu/business/accounting/define/

  6. What Are Some Other Administrative Systems? • Each major business area has application developers that write/integrate systems for their business area • Systems used for conducting the business of the University • e-Proxy – authorization to represent • Bevo Bucks – electronic funds system • Task Manager – job submission • VIP – Alumni System • FAMIS – Facilities Management • TXCLASS system • Compliance Training • Within ITS, Applications and Administrative Systems provide software infrastructure and support for business area applications and developers

  7. Administrative Applications • Mostly Web-based • Accessed through UT Direct Portal • EID authenticated • Still some TN3270 or “green screen” applications • Require mainframe logon ID • Transactional in nature

  8. Mainframe Logons and Authorizations • TN3270 applications require mainframe logon IDs • Departmental Contacts • Mainframe orientation (IC 101) • Beginning class for users with mainframe logon IDs; see TXCLASS to register • DPUSER/Apollo (within the mainframe environment) • Authorization for users • Authorization for programs

  9. Development Standards • Real-time integration • Data belongs to the business areas • Business areas build/buy their own applications in consultation with IT specialists • Think globally act locally – share solutions • “Service” modules to share information and functionality • Encapsulate audit, access and update • Consistent layer for business logic • Robust, secure and efficient

  10. Platforms and Tools • Enterprise Servers • IBM zOS/e and one Linux partition (mainframe) • Sun Solaris 10 servers (utdirect.utexas.edu) • Natural/Adabas • Authoritative sources for most University data are stored on mainframe in Adabas • Tamino (XML database) and Oracle • webAgent • Java/PHP/Cold Fusion

  11. Accessing Adabas Mainframe Data • Natural • External to mainframe environment • uTED – Enterprise Directory (Open LDAP) • AEMS – Active Directory • XML Gateway – Web service calls to any Administrative system • Batch submission • Many academic systems depend on data from the mainframe • Active Directory • Blackboard

  12. Data Access Methods

  13. Application Developer Training • ITS Training program • Natural/ADABAS/webagent • Provides trained and vetted developers to campus • Open to current employees wanting to learn tools • SY 101 – Systems Analyst training • IT Professional Development • Facilitate external training opportunities • Teach best practices and professional methodologies • Teach new technologies.

  14. Contact Applications • Application Assistance from EIS • http://www.utexas.edu/its/ • eis@its.utexas.edu • Contact training program through the Education Manager – Sarah Holmes • s.holmes@its.utexas.edu

  15. Project IQ Darin Mattke Information Quest darin.mattke@austin.utexas.edu Jarrett Cole Information Quest jcole@austin.utexas.edu

  16. What is Project IQ? Project IQ (Information Quest) Gives University leaders the information they need in the way they want it … • Quick extraction of data without custom programming • Systematically updated data • Flexible formatting of data • Appropriate security

  17. Project IQ Transforms Data into Management Information for University Leaders

  18. What Is Included? Phase I: Financials • Financial Information / Trends • Appointment Activity • Budget Information • Research Activity Phase II: IQ/PBIS • Performance Based Instruction System • Course and Instruction Planning • Enrollment Management • Bi-Annual Compacts • Accountability Systems

  19. How Does Project IQ Work? Data is extracted from the mainframe transactional systems and copied to the data warehouse on a nightly basis. The data warehouse uses Oracle, a relational database to store the data. Once the data is in the warehouse, then you can use Cognos web reporting tools to look at the information in reports.

  20. More Information? Web site: https://utdirect.utexas.edu/iq • Training aids: class materials, Web tutorials, answers to exercises, sample data • How to get started • What’s available • Questions or suggestions? • Contact us at IQhelp@austin.utexas.edu

  21. Resources • Mailing lists • Application developers – txedge@lists.cc.utexas.edu • Contact e-mail addresses • eis@its.utexas.edu • IQhelp@austin.utexas.edu • URLs • *Define – http://www.utexas.edu/business/accounting/define • TXShop – http://utdirect.utexas.edu/txshop • Group E-Mail – https://utdirect.utexas.edu/gs/oe/index.WBX • Events Calendar – http://utdirect.utexas.edu/events • Blackboard – http://courses.utexas.edu • Department System – http://utdirect.utexas.edu/dept • EIS – http://www.utexas.edu/its/eis • Project IQ – http://utdirect.utexas.edu/iq

  22. Questions?

  23. Activity

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