Colleges Signing on for iData Reporting Service

Three colleges have gone public with their adoption of an online service intended to streamline their reporting work. Bucks County Community College in Newtown, PA; Simmons College, a small, private university in Boston; and Tarrant County College in Ft. Worth, TX have subscribed to Data Cookbook, a Web-based service that provides a knowledgebase for storing reporting details and facilitating reporting collaboration among users. The service was created by iData, which does consulting to colleges and universities.

"iData's Data Cookbook provides an easy-to-build, easy-to-share, easy-to-audit resource for our college community," said Mary Robbins, associate vice chancellor, Information Services at Tarrant County College. "TCCD selected the Data Cookbook to document and publish the official definitions of our key terms, ensuring that we are all speaking the same language."

The service facilitates best practices in reporting by allowing the institution to create a Data Cookbook account that maintains information on reports and defined terms. When new reports are needed, users walk through a specification form, which is assigned to a developer within the institution. That person specs out the report and returns it to the user for review and approval. The conversation between the two participants is captured by the system. A community area in the service provides standardized reports that can be used by customers.

Pricing for Data Cookbook is $2,400 for an annual license for five users, $4,800 for institutions with fewer than 3,500 full time employees, and $7,200 for institutions larger than that.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • Digital Network of User Profiles and Data Connections

    Microsoft, RSA Make Identity Security Push in the Age of AI

    Two of the bigger authentication announcements to come out of the recent RSA Conference both point in the same direction: Organizations need a more flexible, unified approach to identity security, especially as AI agents start acting alongside human workers.

  • AI logo near computer equipment

    White House Releases National Policy Framework for AI

    The White House has released a four-page AI policy framework aimed at setting a national approach to AI, with priorities including child safety, intellectual property protections, truth and accuracy guardrails, and worker training for an AI-driven economy.

  • Profile silhouette of a person thoughtfully touching their chin, overlaid with transparent data visualizations and digital interface elements suggesting artificial intelligence and analytics.

    The Institutional Knowledge Shift Is Reshaping Higher Ed IT

    Higher education IT leaders are navigating a quiet but consequential transition: Experienced team members are retiring or leaving for private-sector roles, and the teams replacing them are smaller, newer, and often stretched thin. The result is a structural shift in how technology decisions are made, executed, and sustained.

  • Abstract digital data stream with binary code and colorful light trails

    Microsoft Releases Open Source AI Safety Tools for Agent Development

    Microsoft released RAMPART and Clarity as open-source projects intended to help developers test AI agents earlier in the software lifecycle and turn red-team findings into repeatable engineering checks.