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Chief information officer (higher education)

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this experience, well acquainted with the role CIOs in higher education institutions, indicated seven areas which she felt were requirements for CIOs. These included (as cited in Hawkins, 2004): 1) a clear vision about the role on information technology in higher education; 2) excellent oral and written communication and listening skills; 3) ability to form alliances and relationships with key campus constituents; 4) the ability to work collaboratively and effectively; 5) the ability to make and back hard decisions; 6) the ability to manage resources judiciously, and 7) deep expertise and knowledge in at least one aspect of technology. Cash and Pearlson (2004), representing the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration and the Concours Group, respectively, identify leadership, business and technical competencies as essential for CIOs in higher education. Carol A. Cartwright (2002), who served as president of Kent State University from 1991 to 2006 and who is currently serving as president of Bowling Green State University, sought several essential qualifications in a CIO who would be expected to serve as a full-fledged member of her “executive orchestra”: proven leadership skills, strong management skills, and an understanding of the difference between these two. Wayne Brown (2010b), the CIO at Excelsior College who has conducted annual surveys with CIOs and executive management on the role and effectiveness of CIOs since 2003, surveyed 440 CIOs in higher education in 2010 to determine what they considered the top skills needed to be effective in their positions. Brown (2010b) reported that a CIOs’ top five skills in order were: communication skills, leadership, technical knowledge, interpersonal skills and higher education knowledge. The same question posed to members of the management team at higher education institutions revealed that they ranked the same top five skills as important but in a different order: technical knowledge, communication skills, leadership, higher education knowledge, and interpersonal skills. Lastly, Hawkins (2004) identified five skills that he believed were critical to success as a CIO in higher education: strong communication skills, boundary-spanning ability (i.e. the ability to work across the silos that often exist at institutions), leadership ability, management experience, and a strong understanding of the academic environment.
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CIOs (who responded to his survey) have graduate degrees, and this percentage has been steadily increasing since 2007. According to Brown’s 2010 survey, 58% of CIOs have master's degrees while 21% have a doctorate. Of those possessing a doctorate, these CIOs were working in all types of institutions ranging from doctoral-granting institutions to those with a special focus. About one third of these CIOs were working at a Master’s institutions while another third were working at a doctoral-granting institution. In contrast, his survey showed that the majority of CIOs with a master's degree as their highest level of academic preparation were working at institutions granting only associate degrees.
87:; MA I, MA II, BA Liberal Arts, BA General, and AA. In addition, the CIO title used at different institutions may represent unique positions with differing roles and responsibilities. Ultimately, there is no one definition for a CIO; it has a variety of meanings, functions, areas of purview, reporting structures, and required qualifications. Some traditional executive and administrative positions in higher education, such as a 157:
higher education in 2010 was an average of 6 years, 8 months, which is a drop from 2007 where the average tenure was 7 years, 5 months. The combination of these factors---the aging CIO, retirement plans, the faster change-over in CIO positions—presents a promising picture of job prospects for those seeking CIO positions in higher education in coming years.
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prospective CIOs who prepare in a manner to meet these perceived expectations in terms of academic degrees and skills may be more likely to be successful in being hired into the position of CIO and succeeding at it. The next two sections explore these two areas, that is, the academic degree preparation and skill set needed for CIOs in higher education.
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What skill set is needed to successfully serve in the role of Chief Information Officer in higher education? A review of the literature provides some useful perspectives. Linda Fleit (1999), the former president and founder of the IT Consulting Firm Edutech International from 1985 to 2008 and through
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and HigherEdJobs.com found that only 44.30% of the positions required a graduate degree as a requirement (Brown, 2010a). Brown speculates that position postings that do state a graduate degree requirement are simply attempting to create a larger pool of candidates. Brown (2010b) reported that 79% of
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have been in existence for a long time and typically have a definite career path. In contrast, the position of CIO in higher education, which has only been around for about 35 years, has no single career path nor single model to explain what can be expected of CIOs in higher education, which makes it
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According to Brown (2010b), in 2010 59% of CIOs responding to his survey were over 51 years of age compared to 55% in this age bracket in 2009. In addition, he reported that 47% of CIOs in 2010 planned to retire within the next 10 years. Furthermore, his report showed that the average CIO tenure in
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In terms of degree majors for CIO positions, Brown found that 40% of the job postings did not identify the major preferred and another 44% requested a computer related major, or in IT or business. 46% of CIOs and 48% of members of the institution management team believed that the degree major was
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Although there is some variance in the literature as to the best skills and competencies to possess to succeed as a CIO in higher education, the common elements across most of these appear to include leadership skills, management skills, communication skills, business knowledge, higher education
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is the senior executive who is responsible for information and communications technology in the university, college or other higher education institution. The position may not necessarily be called a CIO in some institutions. The CIO title is often coupled with Vice President/Vice Chancellor of
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There is no defined career path for CIOs, nor is there any certification, degree, or even a common body of knowledge that such a ::person should have mastered in order to fulfill this kind of position effectively…finding the right CIO is more about aligning ::personal traits, skills,
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That being said, research in this field including recent surveys of technology leaders, CIOs and academic leaders in higher education institutions provides data on the current and expected levels of academic degrees of CIOs and their perceived required skill set. This, in turn, may mean that
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experience/knowledge, interpersonal skills, and technical skills/deep knowledge in one aspect of technology. What is unclear in the literature is the quantity and quality of these skills, but most likely these will vary depending on the individual institutional context.
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not important (Brown, 2010a). On a related note, the top four degree majors for technology leaders which comprised 70% of the responses were technology, business, education and administration (Brown, 2010a).
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a challenge and an opportunity for those interested in preparing for such a role (Brown, 2009; Cash & Pearlson, 2004; Nelson, 2003). Brian L. Hawkins (2004), former president of
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information technology, is primarily used at doctoral/research institutions, while the titles of Director or Dean are more common at the other five types of
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professional orientation, proven success, and vision with a given campus culture and climate. (p. 100)
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A review of CIO vacancy positions and requirements between April 2009 and May 2010 from the
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Arroway, E. D.; Davenport, E.; Guangning, X.; Updegrove, D. (2010).
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Arroway, E. D.; Davenport, E.; Guangning, X.; Updegrove, D. (2010).
15: 545:. Educause Center for Applied Research: 1–12. Archived from 338:"A study of cio roles and effectiveness in higher education" 282:. Educause core data service. pp. 1–168. Archived from 216:. Educause core data service. pp. 1–168. Archived from 85:
Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education
320: 303: 493:(6). EDUCAUSE Review: 94–98, 100–102. Archived from 462:. The campus computing project. Archived from 405:Cash, J. I.; Pearlson, K. E. (Oct 18, 2004). 80:chief information officer in higher education 8: 244: 242: 240: 238: 364:(1). EDUCAUSE Review: 6–7. Archived from 66:Learn how and when to remove this message 425:Fleit, L. (1999). "The EDUTECH Report". 207:"Fiscal year 2009 summary report : 197: 574: 563: 522: 511: 443: 432: 393: 382: 7: 91:position or chief academic officer/ 484:"A framework for the cio position" 14: 277:"Fiscal year 2009 summary report" 46:has been specified. Please help 20: 1: 124:Chronicle of Higher Education 627: 596:Chief information officers 353:Cartwright, C. A. (2002). 172:Chief information officer 177:Chief technology officer 482:Hawkins, L. B. (2004). 89:chief financial officer 606:Management occupations 573:Cite journal requires 534:Nelson, M. R. (2003). 521:Cite journal requires 442:Cite journal requires 392:Cite journal requires 611:University governance 455:Green, K. C. (2011). 48:improve this article 36:to meet Knowledge's 601:Information systems 340:. Campus Technology 319:Brown, W. (2010b). 302:Brown, W. (2010a). 249:Brown, W. (2010b). 552:on October 5, 2011 500:on October 5, 2011 371:on October 5, 2011 336:Brown, W. (2009). 289:on October 5, 2011 223:on October 5, 2011 469:on April 23, 2012 76: 75: 68: 38:quality standards 29:This article may 618: 582: 576: 571: 569: 561: 559: 557: 551: 540: 530: 524: 519: 517: 509: 507: 505: 499: 488: 478: 476: 474: 468: 461: 451: 445: 440: 438: 430: 421: 419: 417: 411:Information Week 407:"The future cio" 401: 395: 390: 388: 380: 378: 376: 370: 359: 349: 347: 345: 332: 330: 328: 315: 313: 311: 298: 296: 294: 288: 281: 263: 262: 260: 258: 246: 233: 232: 230: 228: 222: 215: 202: 152:Career prospects 71: 64: 60: 57: 51: 24: 23: 16: 626: 625: 621: 620: 619: 617: 616: 615: 586: 585: 572: 562: 555: 553: 549: 538: 533: 520: 510: 503: 501: 497: 486: 481: 472: 470: 466: 459: 454: 441: 431: 424: 415: 413: 404: 391: 381: 374: 372: 368: 357: 352: 343: 341: 335: 326: 324: 318: 309: 307: 301: 292: 290: 286: 279: 274: 271: 266: 256: 254: 248: 247: 236: 226: 224: 220: 213: 204: 203: 199: 195: 163: 154: 141: 120: 72: 61: 55: 52: 41: 25: 21: 12: 11: 5: 624: 622: 614: 613: 608: 603: 598: 588: 587: 584: 583: 575:|journal= 531: 523:|journal= 479: 452: 444:|journal= 422: 402: 394:|journal= 350: 333: 316: 299: 270: 267: 265: 264: 234: 196: 194: 191: 190: 189: 184: 179: 174: 169: 167:Fractional CIO 162: 159: 153: 150: 140: 137: 119: 118:Qualifications 116: 111: 110: 109: 108: 74: 73: 44:cleanup reason 28: 26: 19: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 623: 612: 609: 607: 604: 602: 599: 597: 594: 593: 591: 580: 567: 548: 544: 537: 532: 528: 515: 496: 492: 485: 480: 465: 458: 453: 449: 436: 428: 423: 412: 408: 403: 399: 386: 367: 363: 356: 351: 339: 334: 322: 317: 305: 300: 285: 278: 273: 272: 268: 252: 245: 243: 241: 239: 235: 219: 212: 210: 201: 198: 192: 188: 185: 183: 182:IT governance 180: 178: 175: 173: 170: 168: 165: 164: 160: 158: 151: 149: 145: 138: 136: 132: 129: 125: 117: 115: 105: 104: 103: 102: 101: 99: 94: 90: 86: 81: 70: 67: 59: 49: 45: 39: 35: 34: 27: 18: 17: 566:cite journal 554:. Retrieved 547:the original 542: 514:cite journal 502:. Retrieved 495:the original 490: 473:February 22, 471:. Retrieved 464:the original 435:cite journal 426: 414:. Retrieved 410: 385:cite journal 375:February 12, 373:. Retrieved 366:the original 361: 342:. Retrieved 327:February 20, 325:. Retrieved 310:February 20, 308:. Retrieved 291:. Retrieved 284:the original 257:February 20, 255:. Retrieved 225:. Retrieved 218:the original 208: 200: 155: 146: 142: 133: 121: 112: 79: 77: 62: 53: 30: 556:February 5, 504:February 2, 416:February 5, 344:February 4, 293:February 5, 227:February 5, 187:IT strategy 100:concluded: 50:if you can. 590:Categories 193:References 139:Skill-sets 56:April 2011 429:(15): 8. 209:Educause 161:See also 128:Educause 98:Educause 31:require 269:Sources 93:provost 33:cleanup 550:(PDF) 539:(PDF) 498:(PDF) 487:(PDF) 467:(PDF) 460:(PDF) 369:(PDF) 358:(PDF) 287:(PDF) 280:(PDF) 221:(PDF) 214:(PDF) 579:help 558:2011 527:help 506:2011 475:2011 448:help 418:2011 398:help 377:2011 346:2011 329:2011 312:2011 295:2011 259:2011 229:2011 42:No 592:: 570:: 568:}} 564:{{ 543:22 541:. 518:: 516:}} 512:{{ 491:39 489:. 439:: 437:}} 433:{{ 409:. 389:: 387:}} 383:{{ 362:37 360:. 237:^ 126:, 78:A 581:) 577:( 560:. 529:) 525:( 508:. 477:. 450:) 446:( 427:3 420:. 400:) 396:( 379:. 348:. 331:. 314:. 297:. 261:. 231:. 211:" 69:) 63:( 58:) 54:( 40:.

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Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education
chief financial officer
provost
Educause
Chronicle of Higher Education
Educause
Fractional CIO
Chief information officer
Chief technology officer
IT governance
IT strategy
"Fiscal year 2009 summary report :Educause"
the original




"2010 study of higher education chief information officer roles and effectiveness"
"Fiscal year 2009 summary report"
the original
"2010 higher education technology leadership study: The chief information officers of the future"
"2010 study of higher education chief information officer roles and effectiveness"
"A study of cio roles and effectiveness in higher education"
"Today's cio: Leader, manager, and member of the "executive orchestra""
the original

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