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College of Information Science

and Technology

Visit our home page at www.ist.unomaha.edu

IS&T: Great ideas, great students, great college

Great ideas and great students need the proper environment in order to take root and grow. Since 1996, the College of Information Science and Technology (IS&T) has proved a fertile ground for both.

 

With a goal that no student will go unassisted or unchallenged, enrollment in the college has grown from 124 students to more than 1,200.

 

Situated within the impressive facility that houses the Peter Kiewit Institute (PKI) of Information Science, Technology and Engineering, the college has an award-winning faculty and administrative staff, as well as lab and classroom space rivaling that of any university campus, including Stanford and MIT.

• College of IS&T Timeline

 

• Software Design, Development Focus of One Innovation Place

 

• Student teams bring real solutions to real-world problems

 

 

"We have a nationally-recognized faculty to deliver a curriculum that ranks with the best IT schools," says David W. Hinton, dean of the college. "We constantly review and update our courses in our effort to meet—and stay ahead of—today's rapid changes in technology."

Local and national businesses and organizations, often referred by UNO alumni, link with IS&T students for coursework and product development. The end result has led in many cases to offers of employment upon graduation.

 

Additionally, dramatic advances have been made in external funding through grants and contracts. Faculty members are providing technical assistance through the recently-established PKI Technology Development Corp.

 

Across the campus and throughout the community, IS&T students continue to impress:

 

• Of the 86 undergraduate degree recipients in May 2004, more than 39 percent graduated with honors;

 

• Trevor Clark, a Management Information Systems major, earned the 2004 Vice Chancellor's Award for Outstanding Leadership;

 

• Five students—Courtney Burger, James Smith, Jijesh Vayelil, Cuong Nguyen and Megan Sigmon—were awarded a bronze President's Volunteer Service Award for their work with the Omaha Coalition for the Homeless, writing training documentation for the OASIS system and conducting administrative training sessions;

 

• Andrew Gacek, computer science major, received the 2004 Vice Chancellor's Award as the Outstanding Student at UNO;

 

• Piyush Shah, information systems major, and faculty member Donna Duffner were recognized by Omaha Mayor Mike Fahey for Shah's work designing an Internet feature for the Mayor's telephone Hotline;

 

• For the recent fall term, 202 students made the dean's honor list, including 48 with perfect 4.00 grades. In addition, 22 freshmen were honored at the UNO Honors Program First Year Member reception.

 

"The work ethic, determination and enthusiasm of our students challenge us to do better," Hinton says. "Each semester, the number of our graduates continues to grow, as do their accomplishments."

 

Challenging courses. Dynamic faculty. A valuable resource for business and the community. UNO's College of Information Science and Technology is a leader when others struggle to keep pace.

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College of IS&T Timeline

1996—College of Information Science and Technology established, combining three existing units: Computer Science, Information Systems and Quantitative Analysis, and the Center for Management of Information Technology. Michael Mulder named founding dean. Bachelor's and master's degrees offered in computer science and management information systems.

 

1997—"Virtual" groundbreaking held for Peter Kiewit Institute, the 192,000-square-foot facility to house the college. Ceremony linked by satellite to Scottsbluff, Neb., to emphasize the institute's statewide mission.

 

1999—PKI facility opens on UNO's South Campus at site of former Ak-Sar-Ben racetrack.

 

2000—Scott Hall opens with housing for 160 scholarship students.

 

2002—First Scott Technology Transfer and Incubator Center opens.

 

2003—Scott Village opens with housing for 480 chiefly technology and engineering majors; Ph.D. in information technology added; student-run One Innovation Place begins; Start of International Academy for Advanced Decision Support, a research center to create tools and technologies for new generation of decision support systems; National Security Agency recognition as Center of Academic Excellence in Internet Technologies.

 

2004—IS&T develops undergrad degree in bioinformatics, the use of computers and information science to study genetic information and biological structures and functions.

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Software Design, Development Focus of One Innovation Place

Students eager to design and develop remarkable software have a home at the College of IS&T, and their address is One Innovation Place.

 

Founded two years ago, One Innovation Place (One IP) recruits and employs the talents of the best and brightest students and puts them to work as consultants for some of the area's largest and most prestigious companies, including Gallup.

 

Once on board, students at One IP are tasked with researching, designing and prototyping new software products in a variety of challenging fields—from robotics and medicine to Internet search engines and food service. One project, for instance, led to a software program that allows persons who hope to become candidates for a liver transplant to rate themselves according to various decision criteria, thus allowing them to identify areas they need to concentrate on to better their opportunities.

 

Dr. Gerald R. Wagner (pictured below), a distinguished research fellow within the Peter Kiewit Institute, guides the program. One IP, explains Wagner, is the evolution of two earlier programs that had related goals.

 

"The concept for One IP began with the VIA Design Group, a student multimedia and design center that emphasized Macromedia Flash MX, a development platform for animations and the ability electronically to put user interaction into motion," Wagner says.

 

The second program was New Generation Consulting, a student-run information technology consulting firm that recruited great students with great ideas to solve problems and consult in IT aspects ranging from networks to security.

 

"We determined we did not want to be in generic IT consulting. Also, we did not want to be pigeonholed in either Flash MX or multimedia," Wagner says. "We wanted to take the themes we had been successful with and expand them. One Innovation Place is the result, a place for innovation in new software product research, design and development."

 

One IP is a people-oriented program that requires a particular skill set, Wagner says. Students are recruited from a variety of study areas, including information systems, computer science, studio arts, geography and graphic design. They must be smart, driven, team players with positive attitudes and pride in their work.

 

"If people are not overachievers, they don't last around here," Wagner says. "We are looking for students who are somewhat rare, as evidenced by the fact we have wonderful projects waiting for the right students to work on them."

 

It is not an internship program, Wagner emphasizes. "We are a resource for companies in need of new software products and for students who are destined to become entrepreneurs."

 

Once a project is selected, students often are paired into two teams. Each team meets with the client then competes independently to produce the best software product. Teams present their product and the client decides which is the best solution, or if a combination of the two is best. Depending on the client, students receive a stipend similar to what an intern would earn.

 

"It's a wonderful model for students," Wagner says. Although some software becomes intellectual property that could be sold, Wagner adds, "This program is designed not as a moneymaker but as a learning experience for students."

 

An effort is underway to recruit incoming freshman so as to keep them involved in One IP for as long as possible. "It's fun, intellectual, challenging and original," Wagner says. "What bright student wouldn't want to take advantage of such an opportunity?"

 

Eric Goeken

"Phenomenal" is how Eric Goeken describes the opportunities available at One IP. "Not only is One IP a cutting-edge idea," Goeken says, "that's also a great way to describe the projects we're working on."

 

The third-year computer science major from Omaha has been at One IP for a year. His initial project called for the creation of a video business plan player for use in presentations.

 

"It had the ability to jump to key parts of the demonstration. It was a network application, which allowed several people to watch it and communicate simultaneously, and they could log their comments for anyone who watched the video later."

 

Goeken says One IP provides something traditional instruction can lack.

 

"I think it really completes the education process. You can learn methods, formulas and practices in a classroom, but this goes the next step and applies it to real life. We're breaking new ground every day."

 

Anna Klotz

Anna Klotz's first project at One IP called for the replacement of an existing Microsoft PowerPoint slide show to fit the needs of a unique client—UNO Maverick Head Volleyball Coach Rose Shires.

 

"She wanted to use it as a sales tool to recruit players, but needed several features to be added to allow for an interactive experience for the athletes," says Klotz, a senior from Council Bluffs, Iowa.

 

But One IP is about more than software development. "This experience has given me a foot in the door with so many prospective employers," says Klotz, who will graduate in August. "It's given me a greater eye toward the real world, a deeper knowledge that I wouldn't have otherwise."

 

It's a place for students and faculty to generate and exchange ideas as peers and as friends, she says. "It's a family-type environment full of innovative thinkers. It's not only an awesome work experience, but it gives you a place to be on campus that really feels like a home."

 

Volkhard Korth

Volkhard Korth, an MBA student from Braunschweig, Germany, served as the first student director of One IP. "What I like the most about One IP is the entrepreneurial aspect. It's something you can't find anywhere else."

 

Prior to coming to UNO, Korth launched his own student consulting company at a university in Germany. "As a student, they may see what we are doing and just want to give it a try. But once they are involved, the entrepreneurial spirit takes over. It becomes a driving force that leads to a great feeling of accomplishment."

 

Though he'd had experience with his own company, what he found at IS&T was impressive. "I'm amazed by the facility here, the faculty and what these students can do. I've learned a lot from working with them, and I've had fun along the way."

 

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Student teams bring real solutions to real-world problems

 

Four real companies, four different problems:

 

• An auto service station records transactions with an outdated, manual paper-based system and seeks to convert to an electronic database.

 

• Business swells for a lawn service, and so do the company's bookkeeping problems—lost billing records, sketchy clientele information and redundant data. A database infrastructure is needed for customer information, billing and daily itineraries.

 

• An emergency medical aircraft operation looks to merge its paper and electronic data sources into a single electronic retrieval system that is fast and accurate.

 

• A popular restaurant bottlenecks during peak hours and considers hiring more employees, which would cut profits. It seeks a web-based solution to streamline workflow and minimize operational costs.

 

One source for each solution—student teams in the College of Information Science and Technology. Specifically, those students in the Information Systems Analysis and Systems Design & Implementation capstone courses taught by Professors Leah Pietron and Paul van Vliet (pictured below).

 

Each semester, two dozen businesses, educational institutions and volunteer agencies tap the resources of the award-winning instructors and their eager student teams in a classic win-win. Clients solve their problems in a rapid and reliable manner; students earn valuable experience, six credit hours and a good measure of self-confidence.

 

"It is an extraordinary opportunity for the students," van Vliet says. "They create a real-world working information system for a real client. They experience the entire system's development life cycle, from idea to fully developed and documented working information system."

 

The nine-month course requires the completion of nine milestones. It is an intensive, hands-on course that promises hard work bsut also proves to be a fun experience for both teachers and students, Pietron says. "We truly believe for our students to do real-world applications, they have to work with real-world clients," she says.

 

In doing so, students get to learn from world-class professors.

 

Pietron, a native North Dakotan, has been teaching since 1979, at UNO since 1985. She was a faculty member in the Information Systems and Quantitative Analysis (ISQA) department of the College of Business Administration for 11 years before moving to the College of IS&T.

 

Van Vliet came a bit farther to get to UNO-from Lisse in the Netherlands. He first experienced the United States in 1980 as an exchange student in high school. Later, he obtained his doctorate at Oklahoma State University. While there he was recruited to join the faculty at UNO—and was interviewed by Pietron.

 

Both say they enjoy the opportunity to teach in the modern, expansive Peter Kiewit Institute facility south of UNO's main campus. They also enjoy the challenges presented by the top-notch students who enroll in their capstone courses.

 

"I have a reputation of being very tough, but being fair in project work and examinations," Pietron says. "I believe in pushing my students to illustrate that they are very capable of achieving the standards that I have established for them."

 

Van Vliet recalls that when he started at UNO 11 years ago, "My job was very typical in a standard college of business." No longer.

 

"Now we have this fantastic facility to work in. We have our own college. We have our own major. There is always something exciting going on here."

 

The two do their best to channel that excitement into the energy that fuels learning. "I enjoy seeing the 'lights come on' when students are able to apply theory to practice," Pietron says. "It is exciting to see them grow and start to understand."

 

Although they've had opportunities to teach elsewhere, both are committed to UNO and IS&T. "I'm not sure I'd really want to be anywhere else," van Vliet says. "I have one of the best jobs in the world here. I have the opportunity to travel. I have great facilities, great colleagues and a great department. There's not really a reason for me to leave."

 

Adds Pietron: "The most important thing that keeps me here is the ISQA faculty," she says. "Our department is very innovative and concerned about undergraduate and graduate education. The second reason is that I am only eight hours away from my home in North Dakota. My father died in 1993 but my mother is still very robust and active. Family is very important to me, and being able to drive home in a day makes living in Nebraska very ideal."

 

The commute home takes longer for van Vliet, but he still tries to make it there each summer. "Other than being apart from my family, it's not really that different for me being in Omaha," he says. "I grew up in suburbia. Although the politics are very different—and more people speak Dutch in the Netherlands than in Omaha—my life in my homeland was not really that different from the American experience."

 

Both professors are single. Van Vliet resides with two schnauzers and a cockapoo. Away from UNO, he participates in fund-raising efforts for the Nebraska Humane Society and loves to read "big, fat novels. Mysteries. Science fiction. History. No romance, westerns or horror, but the rest is fair game."

 

Pietron is a passionate Cubs fan who loves the College World Series and all Maverick sports. She bicycles, golfs, travels and enjoys camping in the mountains. And she is caretaker of an orange and black tabby cat. "Dartania was my sister's cat until she moved to California. She has taken over my house and now rules it."

 

Pietron and van Vliet share pride in UNO and IS&T. They believe in what the college has accomplished and are eager to be a part of its future.

 

"The college has worked hard to create partnerships, with benefactors, with a wide variety of businesses and with the extended Omaha community," van Vliet says. "The projects our students take on have added an additional facet to our work. We are really moving forward together. By combining skills, we are producing something that is good for them and good for us."

 

Pietron says it all comes down to the students.

 

"Our graduates are the product of our department, our college and our university. The quality of their education and their impression is invaluable. My greatest accomplishment is to provide students with a knowledge base from my classes that allows them to succeed and make an impact on their organizations. My greatest reward is when former students return and tell me that I made an impact on their lives."

 

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