Annual AACRAO Meeting 2011

Report 3 Downloads 108 Views
Panel Discussion Electronic Exchange of Student Transcripts (Session ID 442 )

Annual AACRAO Meeting 2011 March 16, 2011

SPEEDE – A Professional Development Committee of AACRAO American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers

W. Matt Bemis, Associate Registrar, University of Southern California Tuan Anh Do, Assistant Director, Systems Support Group, San Francisco State University (CA) Clare Smith-Larson, Systems Support Specialist, Iowa State University John (Tom) Stewart, Retired College Registrar, Miami Dade College, (FL) Honorary AACRAO Member

Agenda  A brief history and considerations of various methods

of transcript exchange to include:  Paper & Faxed Transcripts  PDF Transcripts  EDI Transcripts  XML Transcripts

Paper & Fax Transcripts Benefits

Considerations

 Known acceptable process today

 Security risks authentication

 No testing is required before

 Security risks accuracy

sending or receiving

 Speed of delivery for Fax  Paper format legible  IT resources light  IT costs

 Processing upon receipt  Data not readily available  Staffing resource heavy  Interpretation of data  No Acknowledgment  Costs

PDF History  Portable Document Format (PDF) created by Adobe Systems in 1993  PDF proprietary rights were officially released by Adobe as an open

standard in July 2008

 PDF Standards for embedding and retrieving XML within a PDF

approved by PESC in December 2010.

 Electronic image vs. electronic data  Secure PDF digitally signed and certified as authentic  PDF may be password protected – necessary to open, and may specify

restrictions when the document is decrypted – restrictions on printing, life of the document, etc.

 Extract transcript data from SIS and render to PDF document

PDF Transcripts

Benefits

Considerations

 Can be sent to any computer

 Upload of data to SIS

 More secure than mail

 Longevity

anywhere; not just to another school

 Less opportunity for fraud  Faster delivery and easy for human

to print or view

 Low cost

difficult , but embedded XML standards will help  Different philosophies on

appropriateness of expiration

 Multiple transmission

methodologies

 Vendor differences  Varying cost models for

senders/receivers

 Fast implementation  Robust rights management for the

PDF document

Snapshot of the USC experience  USC began issuing PDF transcripts in May 2008  PDF transcript is an official USC transcript  PDF IS “certified”, guaranteeing  Transcript was created by USC  Contents of the transcript are unaltered

 PDF transcripts are not delivered through email attachment –

Recipients are notified via email that a PDF transcript is available for retrieval.

 PDF transcripts are approaching 25% of transcript volume

Snapshot of the USC experience  PDF transcripts seem to be uniquely suited for employers, employment

agencies, and transcripts issued to students.

 USC’s rights management over PDF include the ability to print and

retain the document for life. (Initial rights restricted printing and terminated the document after 180 days).

 USC students have 24/7 access to PDF transcript request and delivery

services

 PDF transcripts are accepted by USC Admissions offices but must be

sent from the issuing institution (or through an approved vendor) and must be accompanied with a digital signature.

Sample of a valid digital signature

Sample of an invalid digital signature

EDI History  The AACRAO Standardization of Postsecondary Education Electronic Data

Exchange Committee (SPEEDE) began developing national standard in 1989

 AACRAO SPEEDE developed the initial format for the College Transcript  US Department of Education’s National Center for Education Statistics

(NCES) began developing a national standard during same timeframe

 NCES developed the format for the K-12 Transcript  Both groups worked with the American National Standards Institute (ANSI)

Accredited Standards Committee (ASC) X12 to develop standard formats

 ANSI ASC X12 Transaction Set 130 for the Student Educational Record

(Transcript) approved in early ’90’s

 Goal to transmit data with the least amount of characters necessary

EDI Process Benefits  Standards are consistent  Resources are available  Processes can be batched and

automated

 Large volume of current

institutions using standard

 State and district initiatives

 Sender and receiver are

identified

 Automated

acknowledgements of both delivery and receipt possible

 Transmission through

SPEEDE Server benefits trading partners

 Costs decrease  Speede delivery 

EDI Institutional Considerations  Capabilities of the organization  IT resources available  Interest level of senior management  Compatibility with SIS

 Cost/benefit analysis  In house vs. vendor sponsored solution  Efficiency gains

 Strategic goals  Preferred trading partner methodologies

EDI Process Considerations  Technical complexity limits some institutions  Need for translation software or SIS compatibility to recognize full

benefits

 Data mapping can be cumbersome  Perception of complexity or lack of IT resources  ANSI ASC X12A Education sub-committee inactive since 2005  Devil is in the details, but it’s only done once

What is XML ?  XML stands for Extensible Markup Language  XML is a markup language much like HTML  XML was designed to carry data, not to display data  XML is designed to be self-descriptive

XML High School Transcript Schema

XML Example - <Student> - <SchoolAssignedPersonID>309032191 582425187 123456789 1989-06-12 Kristen <MiddleName /> Young Female

Key Benefits of XML  Content identification  Enforced structure  International standard  Industry standardization

Additional XML Benefits  It supports Unicode, allowing almost any information in any      

written human language to be communicated Format uses English and less abbreviations (Camel Case) making it less technical to read than EDI format It can be updated incrementally It is platform-independent, thus relatively immune to changes in technology Forward and backward compatibility are relatively easy to maintain despite changes in Schema Compatible with SEVIS, IPEDS and NCATE (for teachers) XML preferred by IT because it is a format they are familiar with

XML Considerations  XML syntax is large relative to EDI (binary)

representations of similar data  This results in higher storage, transmission and processing costs  Example 2K EDI = 30k XML (compression available in

Office 07)

 XML syntax is verbose, especially for human readers,

relative to other alternative 'text-based' data

 Number of tags = more to sift through to determine

what you need for your SIS as a receiver

Questions?

[email protected] Additional Resources

http://www.aacrao.org/speede/index.cfm http://www.aacrao.org/meetings http://registrar.utexas.edu/speede www.x12.org [email protected] pesc.org www.w3c.org

This presentation was brought to you by the AACRAO SPEEDE Committee aacrao.org/speede

SPEEDE – A Professional Development Committee of AACRAO American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers