Hi everyone,

I just wanted to introduce myself and Jesse Xiao. We are both based in Hong 
Kong and would be interested in helping out at Carpentry workshops in South 
East Asia.

Cheers,

Peter

> On 12 Sep 2018, at 11:57 AM, Luis Pedro Coelho <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Hi everyone,
> 
> I am just starting out as faculty in the region as well (at Fudan University, 
> in Shanghai), so I am happy to get to know the broader community here.
> 
> 1) I will definitely spread the word about the school around here.
> 
> 2) I could potentially be interested in hosting the school here, in Shanghai, 
> although I would have to figure out what possibilities there are for funding, 
> space, &c &c. I just moved here < 2 weeks ago, so all is very fresh and 
> unknown.
> 
> Cheers
> Luis
> 
> --
> Luis Pedro Coelho | Fudan University | http://luispedro.org
> 
> PS: 
> https://ilovesymposia.com/2018/08/30/summer-school-announcement-2nd-advanced-scientific-programming-in-python-aspp-asia-pacific/
>  says that the deadline for applications is in 2017, which I assume is a typo.
> 
> 
> 
> On Wed, 12 Sep 2018, at 5:34 AM, Juan Nunez-Iglesias via discuss wrote:
>> Hi everyone,
>> 
>> I'd like to issue two  relevant requests to this discussion: for similar 
>> reasons to those specified in Anelda's original post on this thread, I have 
>> tried to bring the Advanced Scientific Programming in Python (ASPP) summer 
>> school, which has had 11 yearly iterations in Europe, to the Asia Pacific 
>> region. Think of ASPP as SWC++, one to several years later, trying to get 
>> self-taught (or SWC-taught) Python scientific programmers to a more advanced 
>> level, with testing, profiling, advanced NumPy, etc.
>> 
>> Last January we had the first iteration in Melbourne. We had a limited 
>> window in which to advertise, and Australia is hard to get to anyway, so we 
>> only had a couple of non-Australian applications and zero 
>> non-Australian(-based) participants. So I would like to make two requests:
>> 
>> (1) Could you advertise the next iteration, in Canberra, January 20-27, 
>> 2019, in whatever networks you have in the Asia Pacific region? (I believe 
>> Belinda Weaver might have already sent to this list — thanks Belinda! — but 
>> I'm not sure whether it made it *out* of this list.) Details at 
>> https://scipy-school.org. Japan in particular is a demographic I'd like to 
>> reach since researchers there might have the funds to make it to Australia. 
>> (The course itself is free, courtesy of CSIRO and ANU this year, but 
>> students are responsible for their own travel and accommodation.)
>> 
>> (2) If anyone is interested or knows someone who is interested in hosting 
>> the 2020 school in a non-Australian institute in the Asia Pacific region, 
>> please get in touch! I would very much like to take it out of Australia 
>> which is such a challenge to get to, not just with distance but with 
>> restrictive immigration rules. Last January three of our lecturers almost 
>> didn't make it because of visa rules.
>> 
>> Thank you,
>> 
>> Juan.
>> 
>> PS: I wrote a bit more about the history of the school here: 
>> https://ilovesymposia.com/2018/08/30/summer-school-announcement-2nd-advanced-scientific-programming-in-python-aspp-asia-pacific/
>> 
>> 
>> On Wed, Sep 12, 2018, at 12:14 PM, Tom Kelly wrote:
>>> Hi Everyone,
>>> 
>>> Thanks for the encouraging responses. The Japanese community has been 
>>> welcoming but they're difficult to track down, even those able to 
>>> communicate in English prefer to write in Japanese (including organising 
>>> events and societies). The language barrier is as much a challenge as the 
>>> different working culture.
>>> 
>>> My main contact with them has been through the @Tokyo_R_Community (they 
>>> post on Twitter in Japanese) that holds meetings every month or so. 
>>> Unfortunately, Dav will miss the next one (Oct 20; Nov 10) but I encourage 
>>> anyone coming to Japan to check it out. This meeting includes graduate 
>>> students, academics (postdocs and assistant professors), and data 
>>> scientists in industry (including those transitioning to R from other 
>>> tools). Beginners to R and foreigners are welcome. They can also put you in 
>>> contact with groups in other parts of Japan. While they meet as R users, 
>>> many use other tools (e.g., Python, C++, STAN, Git, etc) so I think they'd 
>>> be a good starting point to get momentum with SWC/DC in Japan. They're 
>>> mainly Data Scientists, Statisticians, and Bioinformaticians so I'm not so 
>>> sure about the actual "Tech scene" in Tokyo (although there may be some 
>>> overlap).
>>> 
>>> I'm currently working at a national research institute (The RIKEN Centre 
>>> for Integrative Medical Sciences). While I've got a very encouraging boss 
>>> (who even came to see my talk at TokyoR in her own time), it's not a 
>>> University and I have limited time for teaching. We have discussed running 
>>> internal workshops for our postdocs, collaborators, and the students we 
>>> host but this would likely include specialised tools in our field. I'm 
>>> still interested in being involved in SWC but I would likely need to do 
>>> this in my own time. Due to Japanese working culture, we would likely need 
>>> to hold a workshop over the weekend unless we can get support of a 
>>> university or institute. RIKEN does outreach events for the public but we 
>>> haven't hosted a workshop of this nature before.
>>> 
>>> I may also be able to round up some people from the research institutes and 
>>> universities that I collaborate with. However, I mainly work with wet-lab 
>>> biologists and most of the bioinformatics researchers at my institute are 
>>> foreigners with limited Japanese skills. Therefore I think it's beneficial 
>>> to reach out to groups such as TokyoR, if you know of any others that would 
>>> be great to hear about. Nagoya and Ishikawa are quite far from Yokohama but 
>>> it may be good to hear what they're planning to do there.
>>> 
>>> I think the language issue is very important and it would be helpful to 
>>> have a Japanese translation of the core lessons. My Japanese skills are 
>>> still limited but I'm organising a team to translate the lesson materials. 
>>> We're currently discussing this with those involved in the Spanish and 
>>> French lessons to get their advice:
>>> 
>>> https://carpentries.topicbox.com/groups/discuss/Tdb042c4bc0ecf365/carpentry-lessons-material-in-multiple-spoken-languages
>>> 
>>> Sorry for a lot of details but I hope that helps to hear what I'm involved 
>>> with. Dav, it would be great to meet while you are here and hear from 
>>> you're experiences in Japan (and elsewhere). I've taught quite a few 
>>> workshops in Australia and New Zealand but I'm relatively new to Japan. 
>>> I'll contact you directly to discuss a time to meet.
>>> 
>>> Kind Regards,
>>> 
>>> Tom Kelly
>>> 
>>> On Wed, Sep 12, 2018 at 12:08 AM Dav Clark <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>> Thanks for re-activating this thread Tom!
>>>> 
>>>> In my work as a research consultant, I've been heading out to Japan 
>>>> quarterly to work with an educational company there. Just this week, we 
>>>> actually started talking to folks in the national government about working 
>>>> on technology and methodology in education.
>>>> 
>>>> *I'll be staying in Yokohama from the 25th and heading out Oct 1*. I'd 
>>>> love to meet with folks about open computational science training if 
>>>> others are available. Certainly, there are good opportunities for 
>>>> collaboration on classroom education at scale that I can share.
>>>> 
>>>> I know Yan Fan at Code Chrysalis recently created a minor tweet-storm 
>>>> about making it easier for women to get involved in tech in the Tokyo 
>>>> area. I'd love to hear about ways to connect with academic and 
>>>> non-academic folks working on better open analytics training.
>>>> 
>>>> Best,
>>>> Dav
>>>> 
>>>> On Tue, Sep 11, 2018 at 10:15 AM Chris <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>> __
>>>>> Hi everyone,
>>>>> 
>>>>> When I first joined The Carpentries to help with Library Carpentry 
>>>>> efforts, we had several threads with people in Japan about starting up 
>>>>> The Carpentries in libraries. The following people were interested in 
>>>>> hosting workshops and understanding how libraries can support The 
>>>>> Carpentries. Feel free to reach out to them as well.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Tomohisa Koyama, Executive Advisor to President, Nagoya University
>>>>> [email protected]
>>>>> 
>>>>> Kazu Yamaji, National Institute of Informatics, Digital Content and Media 
>>>>> Sciences Research Division Professor
>>>>> [email protected]
>>>>> 
>>>>> Keita Bando, Librarian, Nagoya Gakuin University
>>>>> [email protected]
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> Christopher Erdmann
>>>>> Library Carpentry Community and Development Director
>>>>> [email protected] | +1 617-817-2826 | 
>>>>> @libcce[https://twitter.com/libcce]
>>>>> Library Carpentry[http://librarycarpentry.org/] | The 
>>>>> Carpentries[https://carpentries.org/]
>>>>> My Pronouns: He/Him/His
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