Group 1
- E-book market
- Embedding e-learning in institutions
- ‘If we could start from scratch – we wouldn’t start from here!’ – to do with what levels (institutional, national, international) we should tackle issues compared to what we are actually doing
- JISC funding models – more imaginative – centres of expertise and other ideas
- Geo-enabled environment + resource discovery – capture geographic data as we digitise content
- Inter-operability – Tools and technology transfer (inside and outside HE)
- Repositories – are they the right places to put stuff? If so, how do we make them compelling?
- Data curation skills
- Information literacy – needs to be embedded into schools
- Open content agenda – sharing of resources – should this happen, how to enable?
- Recruiting staff for JISC projects – JISC could develop a support mechanism, e.g. pool of CVs
Group 2
- Open infrastructure supporting innovation and change – balance in IT departments between robustness and innovation not always there
- Understand institutional barriers to change – what stops new working practices and new technology
- Outsourcing models and shared services
- Resource discovery – single point of entry
- Inclusivity – digital divide agenda
- Levels of service – service standards/expectiation (Keele wifi experience informing this!)
- Burden of technolgoy – on the academic and support staff
- Sustainability of projects
Group 3
- Advice on staff roles
- Denial of service ‘as default’ (Keele wifi experience again) – how can we help people (IT depts) make right decisions
- Debate on mobile devices being ‘mandatory’ (or ‘expected’) of all students – we expect them to have ‘basics’ in terms of paper and pencil etc. why not computing devices
- Setting minimum standards for institutions – what is the baseline?
- Assessment – assessing educational processes as well as assessing outcomes
- Sharing good practice – becomes harder as the sector becomes more competitive
- Perhaps we should play down some areas? Debate at least around whether ‘open source’ and ‘open standards’ are goals in themselves – perhaps concetrate on communities of practice instead
Group 4
- How to engage senior management – help sustainability of projects/services and understanding of relationship between service and development
- JISC step outside comfort zone and engage with senior managers on their own turf
- Make better use of existing contacts with Senior Managers to bring in others
- Better and more detailed project resumes to be able to see easily what had worked and what hadn’t
- Develop a sense of ‘technical authority’ – look at patterns of authority on internet
- Make e-framework more accessible
- Time gap between new technology initial implementation and actual takeup
- Coordination of greater activity across a greater range of standards bodies
- IPR copyright
- Derived data IPR
- Expert registry – how does a team locate expertise (if not via registry, some other method)
- Place of technology in development of practice – it shouldn’t dominate or drive
- Look at scalability of practice to development models
This should all be summarised on the official blog as well http://jif08.jiscinvolve.org (maybe specifically at http://jif08.jiscinvolve.org/2008/07/15/forum-jisc-future-priorities)