1 / 66

Enterprise Business System Software for Research Administration at MSU

Enterprise Business System Software for Research Administration at MSU. Peter D. Asquith Senior Advisor VPRGS & VPLCT Professor of Philosophy. The MSU Enterprise Business System Projects (EBSP). ( http://ebsp.msu.edu )

adelle
Télécharger la présentation

Enterprise Business System Software for Research Administration at MSU

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Enterprise Business System Software for Research Administration at MSU Peter D. Asquith Senior Advisor VPRGS & VPLCT Professor of Philosophy

  2. The MSU Enterprise Business System Projects (EBSP) (http://ebsp.msu.edu) MSU is engaged in Enterprise Business System Projects to update its software support for its functional activities with financial, human resource and research administration components being the current focus. Initially the project involved only the financial and human resource components with the research administration component being added in the summer of 2006. For each of these components MSU is assessing its functional and data needs prior to selecting and then implementing the chosen software products. In addition to these specific business systems there are other components that have application across all of these systems – enterprise information stewardship and business intelligence. Other systems are likely to be added in The future, e.g., a student information system. The following slides focus on research administration.

  3. The Research Administration Component of EBSP Given the importance of obtaining external funding to support the institution’s research activities there is a need to have a research administration system that both meets the complexities of the functional needs of research administration – • Faculty proposal development through submission to funding agencies • Grants administration both fiscal and compliance including closeout • Reporting functions for sound management and at the same time meets the requirements of an enterprise level system - • “Industrial Strength” -- supported centrally in terms of servers, back-up, intrusion and virus detection and protection, and integration with other systems • Protection of Information • Business Continuity and Disaster Plan for Recovery • Quality Control Plan for Identification and Correction of Problems • Accessible System

  4. Overview of Current State of University Level MSU Research Administration Systems • Are locally developed, oriented to the needs of the business process owner, and vary in effectiveness. • Variable in ability to connect to central data repositories and with each other. • Incomplete in dealing with a research proposal from conception to completion. • Developed utilizing a variety of technologies including some that are either outdated or lack scalability. • Don’t contain standardized data element formats • Can simply be an EXCEL spreadsheet stored on an individual machine or a network drive.

  5. Preliminary & Incomplete Inventory of University Level Systems

  6. Inventory (Cont.)

  7. Inventory (Cont.)

  8. MSU Research Administration Software Strategy Participating in the Kuali Foundation project with investing partners Cornell, MSU, Indiana, Arizona and Colorado State with support from the Mellon Foundation to develop open source, database agnostic research administration (KRA) software based on the proprietary Coeus code base. • Developing with partners rather than on one’s own brings more resources to bear both in terms of dollars but also talent. • There will be greater familiarity with the software and realization of the requirements for implementation than with vendor purchased software. • This eliminates being held hostage to vendor upgrade schedules and the necessity of vendor support. • Opportunity to affect the development of the software in ways that will make it a better fit for MSU’s needs. • Greater number of participating institutions potentially provides greater bargaining power with grants.gov development. • Resulting commonality of basic business procedures across a greater number of institutions is potentially useful in audit situations.

  9. The Research Administration Project – Three Components Coeus Consortium Membership Have joined the consortium at the development institution level as a voting member of the various sub-committees – pre-award, post award, compliance and technical. This allows participation in determining the functionality to be added to Coeus. Kuali Research Administration (KRA) Project Along with other investing partners (Cornell, MSU, Indiana, Arizona and Colorado State) and with support from the Mellon Foundation are providing three developers and participating in the writing of the functional specifications to develop this software which is based on Coeus code. MSU Documentation and Assessment Documentation of the current business processes utilized in research administration at MSU. Conduct a current state analysis to determine deficiencies, possible improvements and desired future state.

  10. Coeus And The Coeus Consortium

  11. Coeus – Two Different User Interfaces Coeus employs two different interfaces utilizing different technologies and designed to serve different purposes -- Lite and Premium. Coeus Lite–Java Webstart is utilized to provide an interface that can be utilized by users on any platform by using their web browser. Functionality is provided in this web interface for the creation of the basic components of proposal, routing and submission to federal agencies. Coeus Lite allows: • the end user the ability to create a proposal for submission to a sponsor using an intuitive interface. • the investigator and other individuals to work concurrently on the proposal budget, narratives and the general data within the application. • routing and review of the proposal by individuals in the approval chain for the institution. • the submission of the proposal to Grants.gov. • investigators the ability to complete and submit a human subjects protocol if the Coeus IRB module has been implemented. Coeus Lite makes training the majority of end users much easier since the interface is intuitive yet rich in functionality.

  12. Coeus – Two Different User Interfaces (cont.) Coeus Premium– This is a client/server interface that is graphically rich and icon driven. Considerable functionality is available in this interface that is not available in the alternative interface Coeus Lite. The Premium user interface to Coeus is designed for back office use. Within the Premium interface your functional and business level people can control the routing, business rules, rates, cost elements, unit hierarchy, IRB committee and meeting schedules and all the other functions needed to make Coeus a comprehensive research administration application.

  13. Coeus Lite PortalNeed to logon prior to this screen.

  14. Coeus Lite My Proposals with Proposal Selected

  15. Coeus Premium Initial Screen

  16. Coeus Icons and Menu Choices Top row of icons remains the same throughout the application, but the bottom row changes depending upon the particular activity being undertaken.

  17. Coeus Modules Coeus Consists of nine different modules. The Proposal Development Module The Proposal Development Module has been designed to allow departmental administrators and investigators to construct full proposals from the desktop. First, the user is required to create a proposal shell, which includes the basic header information typically found on an institutional proposal routing form. Once this piece is done, work on the proposal can be distributed by function and managed through use of system roles. The Proposal Development Module also contains a robust tool for creating budgets. It stores all approved Employee Benefit, Facilities and Administrative rates, inflation factors, and ensures compliance with the Cost Accounting Standards (CAS) by allowing the user to budget in the same manner in which expenditures will be incurred.

  18. Coeus Modules – Proposal Development (Cont.) After the budget has been created and the science appended, the proposal is marked complete. The user then submits the proposal for online approvals. The system applies business rules created at the departmental, administrative office level and the centralized sponsored projects office, securing appropriate approvals along the way. When complete, the proposal will go through a final institutional review before it is submitted electronically to those sponsors that can accept an electronic proposal. Alternatively, the proposal can be printed for those sponsors that will require a paper proposal. The Proposal Development Module also is integrated with the Sponsor table (list of all sponsors) and Rolodex table (list of sponsor contacts).

  19. Coeus Modules Institutional Review Board The Coeus IRB module is the latest addition to the suite of modules which make up the Coeus application. The IRB module was designed by Coeus Consortium schools and incorporates the best practices of those institutes. The IRB module allows Coeus users to setup and maintain review committees, including the composition of the committees and the committee schedules. The application also allows investigators to create protocols, submit the protocols to a committee and receive communication during the review process throughout the protocol life cycle. With the addition of Coeus Lite the protocols can be created through any easy to use web- based interface. In addition, the protocol and proposal can be linked within the application, making the protocol information and the grant information easily accessible by the compliance, pre-award and post-award departments.

  20. Coeus Modules The Institute Proposal Module The Institute Proposal Module contains those works that have been submitted to sponsoring organizations for funding. Where works in progress are stored and edited in the Proposal Development Module, only completed works are stored in the Proposal Module. Each proposal that has been officially submitted by the organization to the external sponsor is assigned a unique identifier. Through this identifier, the user can view basic data on funding source, title, department, principal investigators, and amount proposed. Also in this module, the user is able to generate a Current and Pending Support report for any investigator listed in the proposal. Current and Pending information can be downloaded in a variety of formats for subsequent modification to conform to individual sponsor requirements. Once a proposal is funded, the information in the Proposal Module forms the basis of the actual award.

  21. Coeus Modules The Award Module The Award Module maintains detailed information on awards and subcontracts including a complete history of every change made to an award and subcontract from notice through closeout. The Coeus system stores all agency contacts (in the electronic rolodex), maintains all reporting requirements (financial, technical, property, patents), maintains the terms and conditions, required cost sharing, special reviews (animals, human subjects, biohazards, etc.), F and A rates (whether limited by agency or fixed for the life on Federal awards), as well as the required approvals for the equipment, foreign travel, and subcontracts.

  22. Coeus Modules The Subcontract Module The Subcontract Module is maintained under the awards that fund the agreement and contains detailed information on sub-recipient agreements. Data in this module includes: the amount, the start and end date, the investigator at the receiving organization, other administrative contacts, and all required closeout information. Historical information is captured as the subcontract is modified to allow tracking of change orders to the subrecipient agreement. Additionally, funds released from incoming invoices are also maintained. The Negotiation Module The Negotiation Module allows the Sponsored Programs office to track negotiations for individual proposals. It provides administrators with tools to keep notes and track the progress of the negotiation, facilitates sharing of electronic files, and generates status reports for negotiations.

  23. Coeus Modules Person Module The Person Module is the central repository for information regarding employees and students that may be associated with proposals or awards. The person module allows for multiple degree records to be stored, allows for biosketch information in Word and PDF format to be stored, allows the user to produce current and pending support lists for any investigator, and tracks all required training. The Conflict of Interest Module The Conflict of Interest Module allows authorized users to check and maintain all Conflict of Interest and financial interest disclosures that may compromise professional judgment in carrying out research work. Principal Investigators (PIs) can maintain their financial interest disclosures in the Coeus database, and the Sponsored Programs Office can track the apparent conflicts through their resolution and maintain the required annual Conflict of Interest disclosure reports for individual PIs on existing NIH and NSF proposals and awards.

  24. Coeus Modules The Report Tracking Module The Report Tracking Module tracks due dates and maintains the report status for required reports for an award. This module has sophisticated grouping and sorting capabilities to allow custom reports to be generated directly from the application that are relevant to the PI, department administrators and/or central offices. Three views are available at the click of an icon for the most useful views of the data. These views can be subsequently modified to tailor the report to the desired user specification. Once the reports are sorted and grouped, the information can be downloaded.

  25. Coeus Consortium Memberships • A Basic Member will have access to all developments produced by the Coeus Consortium during the course of their membership. • A Development Member will be entitled to participate in Consortium meetings to be held on a set schedule to discuss future development activities and to assist in the identification of detailed specifications of those development activities. The Development Member will also be entitled to propose a specific functionality or a specific infrastructure project related to the Coeus product on payment of additional sums (i.e., in excess of the basic $25,000) subject to the review of the Steering Committee and the final decision of the Program Director.

  26. Coeus Consortium Memberships (cont.) • The third level of participation will be the Steering Member who will provide a greater amount of financial support and, in addition to being able to allocate a portion of its membership fee towards a specific focused Infrastructure Project, will be entitled to designate an individual to serve on a Steering Committee that will assist the Program Director with the establishment of Program priorities and initiatives. The Program Director will receive and be responsive to comments from and the consensus of the Steering Committee in selection of initiatives for implementation. In this manner, Steering Members will assist the Program Director with the choice of new developments. The Steering Committee will meet as often as necessary to determine Program issues, but at least semi-annually. The Steering Committee will support the Program director in preparing an annual summary of Program activities for all Members of the Consortium. • The fourth level of participation will be Industry Member which, because of its commercial interests, will also provide a greater amount of financial support. The Industry Member will be entitled to the same program participation as the Steering Member.

  27. List of Coeus Members Development Members:Indiana UniversityMichigan State UniversityThe Jackson LaboratoryUniversity of RochesterVanderbilt University Steering Members:Brown UniversityCornell UniversityDartmouth CollegeDrexel UniversityJohns Hopkins UniversityMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyMemorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer CenterPurdue UniversitySUNY -- BuffaloUniversity of Maryland - BaltimoreUniversity of Maryland - College ParkWayne State UniversityWeill Cornell Medical CollegeYale University

  28. Basic Members: Stevens Institute of TechnologyUniformed Services University of the Health SciencesUniversity of California - BerkeleyUniversity of California - MercedUniversity of California-RiversideUniversity of California-San DiegoUniversity of CincinnatiUniversity of Medicine and Dentistry of New JerseyUniversity of Mississippi Medical CenterUniversity of TennesseeUniversity of Texas - AustinWhitehead Institute Biomedical Research Arizona State UniversityBaylor UniversityBoston University Medical CampusColorado State UniversityEducation Development Center IncorporatedGeorge Mason UniversityKent State UniversityLoyola Marymount UniversityMaine Medical Center Research InstituteMississippi State UniversityMurray State UniversityPrinceton UniversityRutgers University

  29. Coeus Organizational Structure and MSU Participation As a development level member of the Coeus consortium MSU has a vote on the Coeus sub-committees, but not on the Coeus Consortium Steering Committee. The sub-committees draw up the functional specifications for enhancements and determine the priorities within the functionality covered by the sub-committee. The Steering Committee determines overall priorities. Subcommittees and current MSU representation are: Pre-awardPost-awardComplianceTechnical Lisa Oliva Renee Dolan Linda Triemer Ajay Patel Stacy Salisbury Ann Spalding Kristen Burt Teresa Thomas Craig O’Neill Karalyn Burt Peter Asquith Laura Baese Basic members can participate in sub-committee deliberations, but have no vote.

  30. Coeus: Pros and Cons Pros:History of UtilizationUse by Variety of InstitutionsFunctional Specifications Determined CollectivelyS2S with Grants.GovActive, engaged User CommunityNot commercial vendor product Cons: ProprietaryOracle DependentDeveloped PiecemealStill MIT DependentClient/Server Architecture for PremiumPremium Utilizes Non-user Friendly IconsFew, if any, institutions have implemented the full set of Coeus Modules The intent of the “kualification” of Coeus is to take advantage of the strengths and eliminate or ameliorate the disadvantages.

  31. Why Start with Coeus? • Satisfies the Mellon Foundation requirement to use an existing system. • MIT was willing to provide the intellectual property rights to Coeus for this project. • Is one of the most comprehensive of the existing systems. • Is an actual working product that currently has selected modules in use by numerous institutions. • Possibility of creating product supported by significant number of research institutions. The Coeus Consortium has 44 members. More institutions means: • Increased resources for future development. • Resulting commonality of basic business procedures across a greater number of institutions is potentially useful in audit situations. • Greater number of participating institutions potentially provides greater bargaining power with grants.gov development.

  32. Kuali Foundation And Kuali Research Administration

  33. Kuali The Kuali Foundation is a non-profit organization responsible for sustaining and evolving a comprehensive suite of administrative software that meets the needs of all Carnegie Class institutions. Its members are colleges, universities, commercial firms and interested organizations that share a common vision of open, modular, and distributed systems for their software requirements.  The goal of Kuali is to bring the proven functionality of legacy applications and convert them to online services. The Kuali Partners Program (KPP) is the means for any college, university, commercial, and other not-for-profit organization to get involved in sustaining and evolving the Kuali software and community. Kuali began in 2004 as a cooperative effort among 7 partners and an investment from the Mellon Foundation. It is beginning a transition from a 7 member, partner and foundation funded project to a self-sustaining organization funded entirely by its membership. MSU is a partner in two of the Kuali projects – Kuali Research Administration (KRA) and Kuali Financial System (KFS).

  34. Overall Kuali Foundation Structure

  35. Kuali Project (Module) Organization

  36. MSU KRA Project Participants Project Board Bruce Alexander, Director for the University’s Enterprise Business System Projects and Associate Director for Administrative Information Services Ex-Officio Members of the Extended Board Dan Evon, Director, Contracts and Grants David Gift, Vice-Provost Libraries, Computing and Technologies Peter D. Asquith, Professor of Philosophy and Senior Advisor to the Vice-President Research and Graduate Studies and to the Vice- Provost Libraries, Computing and Technology

  37. MSU KRA Project Participants (Cont.) Functional Council Peter D. Asquith, Professor and Senior Advisor to VPRGS and VPLCT Dan Evon, Director, Contracts and Grants Technical Council Ajay Patel, Administrative Information Services Subject Matter Expert (SME) Subcommittees Representatives Proposal & Budget Development Peter D. Asquith, Professor and Senior Advisor Lisa Oliva, Research Administration Workgroup Lead EBSP System Project (KRA Module co-Lead SME) Stacy Salisbury, Contacts and Grants Administrator Teresa Thomas, Lead Analyst Research Admin Carolyn Wemple, Analyst Research Administration

  38. MSU KRA Project Participants (Cont.) Subject Matter Expert (SME) Subcommittees Representatives (cont.) Award Renee Dolan, Lead Analyst Research Admin Craig O’Neill, Asst Director Contracts and Grants Ann Spalding, Lead Analyst Research AdministrationLaura Baese, Contracts and Grants Administrator IRB Linda Triemer, Director Regulatory Affairs Kristen Burt, ORA Education Program Coordinator Karalyn Burt, SIRB Administrator

  39. MSU KRA Project Participants (Cont.) User Interface Peter D. Asquith, Professor and Senior Advisor Lisa Oliva, Research Administration Workgroup Lead Enterprise Business System Project (KRA Module co-Lead SME) Renee Dolan, Lead Analyst Research Administration Craig O’Neill, Asst Director Contracts and GrantsCarolyn Wemple, Analyst Research Administration

  40. MSU KRA Project Participants (Cont.) Integration Team Rochele Cotter, Director of Client Advocacy Office and EBSP Team Lead Enterprise Information StewardshipVince Schmizzi, Assistant Controller and EBSP Team Lead FinancePeter D. Asquith, Professor and Senior Advisor EBSP Business Intelligence Liaison Teresa Thomas, Lead Analyst Research Administration

  41. Currently Anticipated KRA Development & Release Timeline The initial two releases of KRA software – currently scheduled for July ‘08 and August ‘09 – will be translations of existing Coeus functionality to the new architecture and will not attempt to provide enhancements to Coeus functionality other than those that result naturally from the new architecture. The third release scheduled for Sept ‘10 will include the translation of the Coeus modules not included in Release 1.0 or Release 2.0 and an animal care and use module not currently in Coeus. The fourth release scheduled for October ‘11 will consist of compliance modules not currently contained in Coeus. These project dates are all predicated on having the current complement of developer and SME resources available throughout the project and the relative accuracy of the development hour estimates without developed functional specifications. Changes for both the better or worse are possible.

  42. Currently Anticipated KRA Development & Release Timeline (Cont.) For Release 1.0 functional specification writing and coding are occurring virtually simultaneously while for the modules in releases after the first functional specification writing will occur in the development cycle prior to the coding period for the module. The next slide is a graphic representation of the timeline for the first three releases followed by more eight more detailed descriptive slides on all currently scheduled releases.

  43. KRA Development and Release Timeline

  44. Current division into phases is based upon each of the original four partner institutions providing the full contingent of developers in the memorandum of understanding and no additional investing partners being added. KRA Release 1.0 - July 07 - March 08 (Development) April 08 – June 08 (QA) (Both the writing of functional specifications and coding will occur in this time frame.) Shared Service (RICE) and Infrastructure Baseline Objects and Services: Unit Hierarchy Rolodex Person Organization Workflow Security Role Code/Reference Table Location Sponsor Committee Questionnaire Custom Element Cost Element

  45. KRA Release 1.0 - July 07 - March 08 (Development) April 08 – June 08 (QA) (Both the writing of functional specifications and coding will occur in this time frame.) Proposal & Budget Development Baseline Functionality: Proposal Development Proposal Budget Development Submitted Proposal Proposal Routing Grants.gov Integration

  46. KRA Release 2.0: July 07- June 08 Functional Specification DeterminationJuly 08- July 09 Development and QA Institutional Review Board Baseline Functionality: Submission of protocols – new, continued, amended Recording IRB deliberations and review of protocols IRB notifications IRB meeting agendas and committee minutes Queries to look up approved protocols and training information Special reviews and other committees Records required Human Participants training Committee creation and scheduling Batch correspondence and correspondence generation

  47. KRA Release 2.0: July 07- June 08 Functional Specification DeterminationJuly 08- July 09 Development and QA Awards Baseline Functionality: Award detail Cost sharing Indirect cost Payment schedule Sponsor funding transfer Approved equipment and foreign travel Award closeout Payment Money and end dates Award Budget Contacts Award templates Special reviews Investigator credit split Notice of Award Data feed and integration with financial system

  48. KRA Release 2.0: July 07- June 08 Functional Specification DeterminationJuly 08- July 09 Development and QA Conflict of Interest Baseline Functionality: Conflict certifications for faculty, staff, and students Tracking of disclosures, reviews, and decisions Separate financial disclosure information as confidential or non-confidential

More Related