Texas A&M College of Engineering Innovates with Citrix Solutions to Transform the Student
Experience
The IT Department Replaces Traditional Computer Lab with Collaboration Room and Supports Mobile
Devices
In today’s digital learning environment, students expect to navigate their education in the same way that they manage their
personal interactions and transactions. They demand a highly engaged and personalized experience – accessible via their preferred
communication channels and devices – giving educational institutions that can deliver on these expectations a competitive
advantage. Texas A&M, the largest university in the state of Texas, with about 60,000 students at the main campus and 17,000
students in the College of Engineering, turned to Citrix to transform the educational experience for engineering students by
introducing new innovative options for how they securely access their critical apps.
The IT team leading the College of Engineering was looking for a way to allow students to bring in their own personal devices or
use university-supplied Chromebooks while ensuring the interoperability of existing technologies and security of these devices
regardless of where they are used. With Citrix virtualization solutions Citrix XenApp and XenDesktop, and Citrix networking
solution NetScaler ADC, they enabled student access to applications and data while maintaining the control and security that IT
required. They also created an engineering environment that allowed them to replace traditional physical desktop computers in the
computer labs with zero clients, which use far less power and can last an average of eight years or more. Immediately, the feedback
from students was an enthusiastic demand for more of this technology that gave them the freedom to work as they were accustomed to
– from any mobile device, in any location – whether in the lab, in a dorm room or in a coffee shop.
As the College of Engineering team continued to expand the concept to other labs and classrooms, they began to prove the value
of their idea and became known as innovators across the university. As a result, group leaders around the university were willing
to fund the IT team’s next big idea – a new kind of computer lab that resembled the collaborative workspace typical of today’s
high-tech corporations. The team created a new physical space by altering the design of the room to support a diverse set of
activities from independent study to collaboration on group projects. Instead of a room comprised of traditional rows of desktop
computers on tables, open spaces with inviting seating and empty tables were created. In these new flexible spaces, students can
bring and use their own personal devices or the university-supplied Chromebooks, all while still securely accessing the same robust
engineering software they previously could only use on the desktops in the computer lab. Students enjoy the same great results, but
with an improved user experience. Transforming the labs into a more digital setting is building innovation into how they are
talking about issues, and what they are doing to solve them by allowing them to get into new and creative areas of discussion. And
according to Forrester, reorganizing physical workspaces to foster collaboration and mobility is a trend on the rise among many
universities.1
Enabling a new way of learning not only inspires creativity and simplifies the lives of students, it supports the university’s
larger goal of preparing students to successfully transition into the business world by offering them similar ways of working. And
by saving the IT team time that used to be spent refreshing PCs every three years, they can now focus on new creative IT projects
supporting their anticipated growth to an enrollment of nearly 25,000 students spread out across Texas by 2025.
Quotes
Mark Henry, Manager of Virtualization and Learning Technologies for the College of Engineering, Texas A&M
“We’ve adopted Citrix solutions to create a virtual workspace that allows our students and faculty to access apps and data from
any location at any time. We’ve also renovated our computer lab to function as a collaborative space, rather than as a traditional
lab with desktops. As a result, our IT team has noticed that the ability for students to get into a more creative setting has
changed their way of thinking when collaborating on school work. And what’s great about Citrix solutions is that they allowed us to
offer this flexibility without sacrificing security.
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Citrix (NASDAQ:CTXS) aims to power a world where people, organizations and things are securely connected and
accessible to make the extraordinary possible. Its technology makes the world’s apps and data secure and easy to access,
empowering people to work anywhere and at any time. Citrix provides a complete and integrated portfolio of Workspace-as-a-Service,
application delivery, virtualization, mobility, network delivery and file sharing solutions that enables IT to ensure critical
systems are securely available to users via the cloud or on-premise and across any device or platform. With annual revenue in 2015
of $3.28 billion, Citrix solutions are in use by more than 400,000 organizations and over 100 million users globally. Learn more at
www.citrix.com.
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1 Forrester’s Global Business Technographics Mobility Survey, 2016 – 32% of respondents from universities say that
reorganizing physical workspaces to foster collaboration and mobility of workforce is a high priority.
Citrix
Stacy St. Louis, 408-790-8634
Stacy.Stlouis@citrix.com
Twitter: @CitrixPR
View source version on businesswire.com: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20161026005522/en/