ASU IT Professional Community Day, Empower 2019, Drives Technological Innovation for Years to Come
On Thursday, May 23, the University Technology Office hosted Empower 2019, an ASU IT Professional Community Retreat designed to discover new innovations and improve existing ones through peer-to-peer discussion. Over 800 ASU IT professionals spent the day engaging with ASU Chief Information Officer Lev Gonick, each other and a wide array of speakers. ASU President Michael Crow capped the event as Empower’s keynote speaker, contextualizing the IT community’s contributions to the greater mission of the New American University.
Empower was created on the basis of ASU’s eight design aspirations. Experts from inside and outside ASU delved beyond IT, speaking on subject matters such as inclusion in the workplace, honoring place and space in indigenous areas, and key performance indicators (KPIs). Graphic recorder Karina Branson captured many of the “a-ha moments” of these sessions and the whole event. Her illustrations can be seen in the gallery below.
[caption caption="Speaker Alycia Anderson speaks on the importance of inclusion and diversity in the workplace."]
Groups also gathered for Appreciative Inquiry Interviews, a collaborative process that uses positive questions to build a more cohesive vision of the future and progress. Christine Whitney Sanchez, UTO’s Chief Culture Officer, opened the space for participants to create their own parallel breakout sessions focused on the convening question: “Using the eight design aspirations as guidance, what are ASU’s IT issues and opportunities for enabling and catalyzing strategic innovation, community delight and operational excellence?”
After the breakout sessions, participants re-convened to surface the top ideas from the day. At last year’s event, the top idea was a unified service catalog that holds requests IT professionals may receive from the ASU community. The service catalog was launched at Empower 2019.
[caption caption="Attendees visited three of 21 speaker sessions throughout the day."]
This year’s top ideas identified by ASU IT Community Members include:
Big Ideas from Empower 2019
- Chatbots - These artificial intelligence-enabled ‘bots’ have the potential to supplement instruction and advising as well as tailor content and information to meet individual student needs.
- Blockchain - Advancements in this emerging technology can be harnessed to advance a reinvented transcript so that all aspects of student learning are recorded, tracked, portable, and owned by each individual learner.
- Shared Culture of Innovation - A large part of making collaboration easier for the entire ASU community is breaking down silos, making it much easier for groups that don’t always work in the same orbit to come together for exciting new projects.
- Next-Generation Communication - To that end, tools like Slack, a real-time messaging tool with open workspaces and extensive sharing capabilities, are crucial. Slack in the classroom (enhanced by Slackbots that can automatically respond to queries) and centralized Slack communication guidance are two of the specific facets of next-gen communication.
- Non-Traditional Classrooms - Attendees discussed the concept of an ASU college based on non-traditional classrooms. Untethering learning goes beyond educating online; it adds value with inclusivity and micro-credentials that rewards the learning of specific skills. This is a greater challenge than a purely technical one, but it is also indicative of the IT community’s place as “the stewards of the university’s investment in the students,” as CIO Lev Gonick puts it.
- Smart Infrastructure - The investment in a smart campus dovetails into a smart city and smart region, but as it applies to our ASU community, creating an ultimately interactive space and infrastructure is very important. VR campus tours, augmented reality signage, greater mobile app interactivity, and more will increase student engagement and enhance their learning.
President Crow brought these focused conversations full circle when he closed out the day. Technology is a tool to fulfill the concept of a Universal Learner, bringing one university to many places in the process, he stressed. Select design aspirations (connected to place, social embeddedness and intellectual fusion) are important facets of the iterative process that maintains equality, research for the public good, and taking responsibility, President Crow concluded.
Empower 2019 fostered deep conversations from the greater ASU IT professional community, serving as a concrete step in actually implementing theoretical, innovative concepts. Based on the collective wisdom of ASU’s IT community, new and enhanced products and services are sure to emerge from Empower 2019 as well. For more information, visit https://uto.asu.edu/empower/2019, and follow UTO on Twitter @ASU_UTO.