Video Library from the 2016 MOR Leaders Conference
Submitted by Sean McDonald on
Submitted by Sean McDonald on
Submitted by Sean McDonald on
Bruce Maas, Vice Provost for Information Technology and Chief Information Officer, at the University of Wisconsin, keynote video at the 2016 MOR Leaders Conference. Forces and Trends Part I and II.
Submitted by Sean McDonald on
Len Peters, CIO and Associate Vice President at Yale University, keynote video for the 2016 MOR Leaders Conference.
Submitted by Sean McDonald on
Steve Fleagle, University of Iowa, CIO and Director of Information Technology Services at the University of Iowa, keynote video for the 2016 MOR Leaders Conference.
Submitted by Sean McDonald on
Sue Workman, Vice President Information Technology Services and Chief Information Officer, Case Western Reserve University, keynote video for the 2016 MOR Leaders Conference.
Submitted by Sean McDonald on
2016 MOR Leaders Conference Opening Video. Slide show, with MOR mantras and recognition of participating institutions.
Submitted by Sean McDonald on
John Gohsman, Vice Chancellor for Information Technology and Chief Information Officer, Washington University in St. Louis keynote video for the 2016 MOR Leaders Conference.
Submitted by Jim Bruce on
Last week, many of us participated in the 2016 MOR Leaders Conference, Reimagining IT as University Needs and Technology Evolve. There we were encouraged to think about our university’s IT and what it could become. And, we were asked to identify one idea that we each could take action on? I want to take this question one step further: What skill or competency or practice do you need to develop or strengthen in order to take that one action?
Submitted by Jim Bruce on
Today’s Tuesday Reading, Who I think about as “My Leader,” is an essay by Paula Torres, Senior Educational Design Technologist, Global Learning and Innovation, NYU Information Technology. Her essay first appeared as a program reflection last year.
The one person I think of when I think of leadership was not my manager, supervisor, or even coworker. She was an adjunct professor whose class I took at Teachers College.
Submitted by Jim Bruce on