2007 Campus Technology Innovators: Cellular/Mobile
        
        
        
        
TECHNOLOGY AREA: CELLULAR/MOBILE
  Innovator: Montclair State University
Providing communications and mobile services to a diverse
faculty and student body—the way they want it
Montclair State University, New Jersey's second largest
and fastest-growing university, is committed to service as it
races toward a predicted 18,000-student enrollment for its
2008 centennial. One manifestation of the institution's service
mission is a program called MSU Campus Connect,
which provides communications and mobile services via students'
preferred technology: the cell phone. "As part of their
tuition and fees, all incoming students receive a phone that is
GPS-enabled and bundled with a wide variety of mobile learning,
safety, community, and campus navigation tools," explains
VP for IT Ed Chapel. "The program is designed to help the university
keep on-campus and commuter students engaged,
and improve students' overall living and learning experiences."
The original vision for Campus Connect dates back several
  years: It was created as a response to the Student Development
  and Campus Life group's reports of student complaints
  about unsatisfactory telephony services (an older PBX landline-based
  model, with residential students sharing phones in their
  rooms). But Chapel and others in the IT office realized that
  simply replacing the old landlines with cell phone service wasn't
  going to be enough; they looked for opportunities to add
  value by building a custom network for the campus—one which
  could support a host of cell phone-enabled applications. By
  2005, the general availability of high-quality cellular service
  made feasible the first implementation of the
  Campus Connect program,
  which marketed
  cell phones to students
  as "portable information
  kiosks," with about
  10 applications. The
  Campus Connect program
  now leverages the
  mobile functionality—
  and the immense popularity
  and familiarity—of
  cell phones by offering to
  the campus community an
  array of applications for
  academics, social networking,
  SMS and RSS services,
  GPS, and text-alerting capabilities.
 
Technology choices. The Campus Connect implementation
  forged partnerships with Sprint Nextel  for telephone services, and Rave Wireless for applications development and vendor relationship management.
  MSU's Office of Information Technology delivers
  technology support. The current mobile phones—Motorola, Samsung, Sanyo, and LG handsets—
  are offered on the Sprint and Nextel networks, and provide
  specific data options that allow unlimited access to the
  software applications developed by the university, in collaboration
  with Rave Wireless.
  
    INCOMING STUDENTS AT MSUreceive a GPS-enabled 
mobile phone bundled with a 
wide variety of mobile
 learning,safety, community,
 and campus navigation tools.
 
Upon enrolling in the Campus Connect program, students
  create a profile online and select the resources they want to
  receive on their phones (the resources are available via a combination
  of text messaging, GPS-enabled location-based services,
  and the mobile internet). The Campus Connect phones
  are centrally supported to ensure training and support are
  consistently provided to all students. Students receive additional
  benefits from the program (such as no contract requirements
  or activation/break fees), plus they can port their own
  mobile phone numbers to their Campus Connect phones.
  Montclair State leverages the mobile phone to
    improve communication, build community, and increase
    access to campus application and services.
 
Continuing expansion. Currently, more than 3,000 students
  are participating in the Campus Connect program, a figure
  that will double in the upcoming academic year. There's now
  a long and growing list of applications offered, and usage of the
  phones extends to the classroom, where their direct-response
  capability allows for instant polling on surveys and quizzes. Students
  are using the devices for academics in myriad ways:
  downloading course announcements, sending text messages to
  professors, or accessing information that was digitally tagged
  during a lecture, for instance. The most visible campuswide
  applications include sending broadcast text messages in the
  event of a weather emergency; providing access to MSU e-mail,
  student, and staff directories; creating university groups where
  members can participate in group text messaging and polls; and
  an acclaimed Mobile Guardian feature that incorporates a GPS
  tracking system as a "virtual escort" a student can employ if he
  or she doesn't feel safe. Chapel comments on the continuing
  expansion of Campus Connect applications: "From a university
  perspective, we leverage the mobile phone to improve communication,
  build community, and increase access to and usage of
  all of our campus applications and services."