Kuali Foundation
The Kuali Foundation is a non-profit, 501(c)(3) corporation that develops open source enterprise resource planning software for higher education institutions. Kuali modules include Student, Financial, Human Resources, Research Administration, and Library.
Founded | March 2005 |
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Founder | Indiana University, The University of Arizona, the University of Hawaii, Michigan State University, San Joaquin Delta Community College, Cornell University, NACUBO, rSmart Group |
Type | 501(c)(3) |
Focus | Enterprise resource planning software for educational institutions |
Website | www |
Founding partners are Indiana University, The University of Arizona, the University of Hawaii, Michigan State University, San Joaquin Delta Community College, Cornell University, NACUBO, and the rSmart Group.
History
Around 2003, Indiana University administrators were considering alternatives for replacing the existing financial information system. They looked at retooling the current financial system or buying vendor software. In 2004, Indiana University chief information officer Brad Wheeler wrote a paper about the state of open and community source software development in education.[1] This paper helped coalesce a movement among higher ed institutions to create a community source enterprise resource planning software suite.
Wheeler's preliminary work assessed higher education's readiness for a community source financial system project and its applicability across colleges and universities through a planning grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to National Association of College and University Business Officers (NACUBO) in 2004. In March 2005, after more than a year of evaluation, partner coalescing, and preparatory work, the Kuali Financial System (KFS) received a $2.5 million grant from the Mellon Foundation to help complete the software development.[2] Colorado State University and San Joaquin Delta College became the first to host large-scale installations of the full KFS in 2009.[3] Kuali modules now include Student, Financial, Research, and a no-code forms and workflow tool called Kuali Build.
Over the next ten years, usage of Kuali had increased substantially, and by 2014 the Kuali Foundation had 74 member institutions.[4]
In 2014, the foundation invested in Kuali, Inc., which is now responsible for the development of Kuali software and offers the software in the cloud for higher ed institutions.
References
- "Open Source 2007: How did this happen?". 2004.
- "Financial-Software Project Gets $2.5-million and New Members". 1 April 2005.
- "Kuali: The next open source movement". 6 July 2009.
- O'Neil, Megan (28 April 2014). "Open-source software for college administrators reaches 'tipping point' after 10 years". The Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved 3 March 2015.