I thought I'd just leave this here. From the Yale Daily Bulletin:
Coming to a computer near you: Google Apps for Education
posted: April 18, 2011
It's official. Yale is making the switch from its current email system to Google Apps for Education — a move that is expected to cut costs and free up resources, while expanding the features available to the Yale community.
"This will be a huge improvement for students, who will benefit not only from a better Web-based email client, but also from the entire suite of Google Apps for Education: Google Talk, Groups, Docs, Sites and Calendar," says Chuck Powell, associate CIO for operations, support and services at Information Technology Services (ITS). He also noted that the switch means that ITS has one less commodity service to provide, which frees up time to work on more institutionally-important initiatives that outside vendors like Google can't deliver.
ITS plans to move all students to the Google Apps service by the end of the next academic year. It also expects to migrate faculty and staff by the end of the 2012-2013 academic year. Some faculty and staff members with special circumstances — like those dealing with electronic protected health information (ePHI) — will most likely stay on a locally-hosted email system.
After the switch, most email will no longer be stored and accessed on Yale systems. Users will access their email via Google online interfaces that will be customized for Yale. Users can also use email clients like AppleMail and Thunderbird, as well as mobile devices like the iPhone and the BlackBerry. Yale will continue to provide NetIDs and email addresses (email "aliases") following the form firstname.lastname@yale.edu. Google Apps for Education provides shared calendars, website publishing, voice and video chat services, as well as document and file storage.
An ITS Advisory Committee (ITSAC) was convened to study the issues surrounding the possible switch. In a memo recommending the switch to Provost Peter Salovey, ITSAC chair Julie Dorsey, professor of computer science, explained the reasoning behind the move:
"Email and other basic collaboration tools have become a commodity service. External vendors, such as Google, provide better functionality and services at a significantly lower cost than ITS can provide. This is especially true for the student population, which would benefit from the richer set of features Google offers. Moreover, the range of email and collaborative tools is powerful and rapidly expanding; outsourcing will make these tools available to the Yale community as they are developed, ensuring that our community is working with state-of-the-art tools."
According to ITSAC, more than 53% of current students now forward their Yale email to a Google account. Other Ivies like Brown and Harvard have already outsourced email services. More than 200 institutions of higher education use Google Apps for Education.
When word got out last year that Yale was considering the move to Google, some members of the Yale community expressed concerns about the security and privacy of the service. "We have a contract with Google that we think takes good care of Yale's privacy and security," says Powell.
Google is providing this service to Yale free of charge. In the future, Google could charge for or stop providing the service with appropriate advance notice to Yale. Powell notes, however, that Google doesn't have to provide the service for free for it to be more cost-effective than the current setup.
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If Parkland has not considered it yet, this has been a great communications tool for the SST students and their instructor. The Fire Sprinkler Academy at Parkland has been using google mail and apps for nearly a year now. The students have aliases and access to google docs and other apps. They get one-stop for voicemail, email, and phone numbers. The calendar is actually used by all (most of us). We keep attendance through google calendar and the students know exactly when their instructor is in for office hours. Usage data and interactive reports, including where our site visitors are from, let us know how effective advertising has been, worldwide. Google has saved us a fortune in software and time. And yeah, it's free.
ReplyDeleteThe net really does help breakdown barriers. This link is from a website regarding education for people in India and it explains the SST program at Parkland:
http://www.uniguru.com/studyabroad/united-states-courses/associate-applied-science-a-a-sprinkler-system-technology-course-details/cseid/51795178/cid/117409/programs.html
The IT department workload continues to increase. In the age of the frozen budget, using services like Google Apps makes sense. We still have lots to learn about protecting secure data, but everyone is in that camp together these days.
You can read about Google Apps for Education here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.google.com/a/help/intl/en/edu/index.html
Oh, and Gmail motion is a spoof.
ReplyDeleteBut you were excited for a minute, weren't you?
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/faster-forward/post/gmail-motion-a-reality-thanks-to-usc-kinect-hackers/2011/04/04/AFHmWLbC_blog.html
ReplyDeleteActually, I thought that Gmail motion was ridiculous when I saw it! But I did consider the health improvement aspects of jumping around the office all day instead of sitting and typing!
ReplyDeleteSee this article. Maybe Google motion isn't such a goofy idea! http://bit.ly/eDmTR0
ReplyDeleteI will admit, sometimes when Angel "upgrades," I take great comfort in thinking about how I could teach an online writing class using Google. Share documents for drafts, use the spreadsheet for grading...
ReplyDelete