| 31 March 2010 |
2009 PESC Best Practices Award |
I feel honored to have been part of a project to receive national recognition with a Best Practices Award. I created a web service that served high school transcripts to CFNC (College Foundation of North Carolina). While it was a small part of the effort, it lies at the heart of this system.
The PESC (Postsecondary Electronic Standards Council) Best Practices Competition can be found here. An excerpt from a press release is below…
College Foundation of North Carolina’s
“Electronic High School Transcript System”
Wins Top Award in PESC’s 11th Annual Best Practices Competition
Kristi Blabaum of NASLA and Michael Morris of ACT
Honored with Distinguished Service Awards
Washington DC – The Board of Directors of PESC - the Postsecondary Electronic Standards Council is very pleased to announce “Electronic High School Transcript System” submitted by the College Foundation of North Carolina (CFNC) as Winner of PESC’s 11th Annual Best Practices Competition for 2009. This submission received high praise from the Board Review Committee for Best Practices as it focused strategically on the use and support of data and standards and the infrastructure necessary to carry out its long-term goals and vision. The Best Practices Competition is held each year by PESC to promote innovation and ingenuity in the application of standards for business needs. An Awards Ceremony will be held immediately prior to the keynote address of PESC’s Spring 2010 Data Summit being held April 1 – 2, 2010 in Washington, D.C.
In making this submission, Robin Greene, Senior Associate Director, Technology and Internet Services, CFNC, UNC General Administration highlighted its innovative approach stating, “[this system] is the first and only implementation of electronic high school transcripts in the state.” To support its long-term vision, Ms. Greene added, “[this system} is built on a sustainable system infrastructure among a unique collaborative partnership of secondary and postsecondary education entities… it is expandable to include future growth state- and nationwide with additional secondary school districts as well as postsecondary entities using national data standards such as those created and adopted under PESC.”