We have now selected and onboarded our first cohort of community facilitators, 
focussing on feedback facilitation. Read about them in this post.


Community Facilitators in The Carpentries are people who are empowered to 
advocate for others in the community and guide community members as they 
navigate The Carpentries global community.When we set out to start designing 
The Carpentries Community Facilitators program 
<https://carpentries.org/blog/2020/09/introducing-community-facilitators-program/>
 in Q2 2020, one of our main goals was to onboard our first cohort of community 
facilitators, focussing on Feedback Facilitation, before the close of 2020. We 
are very pleased to introduce the first ten Carpentries Feedback Facilitators 
in this blog post.


Over the next six months, as Feedback facilitators in The Carpentries, these 
ten community members will be able to:


 * collect and organise community feedback shared publicly and informally in 
Carpentries spaces for ease of filtering, action and response in the community,
 * periodically offer official recommendations and kickstart conversations on 
issues and items that Core Team should prioritise,
 * maintain a public, community-wishlist board that collates community feedback 
on different initiatives and experiences in The Carpentries
 * recommend topics for Carpentries Conversations and Themed Discussions to the 
Instructor Development and Communications facilitation team as appropriate
For this blog post, we asked each of them to share their experience in The 
Carpentries, and why they are keen to serve as Feedback facilitators so you can 
learn more about them. Here is what they said:


Adewale Adeogun


My involvement with The Carpentries dates back to 2014 when as a Post Doctoral 
Fellow in North West University (NWU) South Africa where I had my introductory 
participation at the Software Carpentry Learner Workshop. The workshop afforded 
me an awareness of my potential to support my research efforts with R and 
Python programming languages. My subsequent activities within The Carpentries 
community included participation at Software/Data Carpentry Trainer workshop in 
2015 at NWU Pochestroom campus; serving as Helper/Attendee at the Library 
Carpentry workshop in 2015 at NWU Vaal Triangle campus and as an Instructor at 
Data Carpentry workshop in 2016 at NWU Mafikeng campus. My inspiration to be a 
Feedback Facilitator came from my love to serve in the community where my 
professional capabilities (as a Data Scientist) can be used to support the 
process of deepening outcomes from Carpentry workshops by extracting insights 
from community members’ feedback. I believe these insights will go a long way 
to improve on planning, strategy development and management activities of the 
Resource team and Administrators at The Carpentries. Community members also 
stand to gain additional knowledge from shared information, which they can 
further apply in their academic, research and/or community participation tasks. 
From the Feedback Facilitators onboarding session, the ability to explore and 
use various academic and social information/data platforms to extract, process 
and communicate community feedback input stood out as an optimal application of 
the mission of The Capentries i.e. exploration of a data, software and library 
melt point platforms to promote and learn from shared information. I took away 
understanding the diverse nature of feedbacks i.e. from simple opinions about 
conversational themes to complex extraction from multi-thematic discussions. 
Also the importance of feedback in a community to promote inclusiveness and 
understanding was another take away for me. As a Feedback Facilitator I am 
fascinated by the fact that one would be able to take note of other community 
members ideas and suggestions, energy and participation of community members in 
The Carpentries events and present them for formal consideration on their 
behalf. In addition, I am most intrigued about the opportunity this role will 
afford me to assess and process feedback data since I know that my output will 
serve to close any gap of information loop that may arise. I am excited to roll 
up our sleeves and get started on the tasks ahead!


Fredrick Kakembo


As a Bioinformatics Research Fellow at Makerere University, I am fascinated 
about how technology and data science can improve health services particularly 
in the area of Cancer management and treatment. I remember back then in 2018 
when I was more of a novice in the field, The Carpentries Resources were my one 
stop-center for learning all the coding skills I required given I was coming 
from a Biological background. It is a place I still look to, even now when 
developing our Lecturing materials. Given the experience and knowledge I have 
acquired to date, I wanted to now be more actively involved in either 
developing more helpful resources or improving currently available resources 
and content that could help someone in search of knowledge just as I was a few 
years back; which greatly inspired me to become part of this cohort of Feedback 
Facilitators. During our onboarding sessions, I was really fascinated by how 
much feedback is being given out on a daily basis, most of which is informal 
(that is, it is not direct feedback) and the power that such information if 
well handled and given the necessary attention has in informing and 
transforming the efficiency and effectivity on our training programs. The whole 
experience was made a very pleasing one by our instructors who created that 
ambience of community-hood (place of belonging) given our diverse geographical 
locations while labouring to make everything as clear as possible. Over the 
next six months, I am really excited to hear the feedback community has to say 
regarding how we can improve on the way we conduct our training so as to 
achieve what the purpose with which they are put out for as well as improving 
on my feedback delivering skills. So in brief; looking forward to helping the 
community as the community helps us with that tone of feedback.


Liz Stokes


My first hands-on experience of the Carpentries was at a Library Carpentry 
workshop in 2016, which coincided with a new data librarian role which had a 
greater focus on imparting data management skills to researchers. This inspired 
me to coordinate an enthusiastic team to co-host a wild social experiment 
(multi disciplinary, cross institutional festival of digital skills and tools 
workshops) the following year across our city - Sydney, based on the highly 
successful University of Melbourne ResBaz. Carpentries workshops feature the 
backbone of our programming for these annual collaborations. Currently I am a 
Senior Research Data Skills Specialist at the Australian Research Data Commons, 
where my role is to support communities involved in research data management 
and data stewardship. I co-chair the Library Carpentry Advisory Group with 
Ariel Deardorff, and am a recently badged Library Carpentry Instructor and 
Trainer.


I was inspired to apply to be part of this cohort because my organisation 
supports a lot of communities of practice, and this program looks like I can 
bring back and share useful skills with my colleagues. During the onboarding 
process, I appreciated the opportunity to reflect on planning for feedback, and 
managing expectations for people giving feedback, as well as the receivers. I 
also enjoyed the CSCCE model for feedback which understands that feedback 
happens in an ecosystem. My understanding of community development is that it 
is similarly an evolving and continuous process, always in a state of becoming. 
I am excited to be joining a group of people with a shared interest in 
facilitating feedback between our local communities and the Carpentries Core 
Team. I’m looking forward to listening to different perspectives and working 
together on shared goals!


Shrirang Kulkarni


I began my journey in Software Carpentry by taking their training for 
Instructor certification and got certified in 2019. My observations during the 
training were the innovative approaches like breakout rooms, a friendly way of 
discussing the concepts and the trainers were always eager to answer almost all 
of our questions. I always actively followed carpentry tweets and was waiting 
to eagerly contribute to carpentry. When I saw the opportunity to apply for a 
feedback facilitator cohort, I was excited. I gave my best shot by specifying 
my experience and credentials and was happy to be shortlisted for this 
wonderful opportunity.The onboarding training was exciting and I observed that 
we were made very comfortable and slowly the onboarding sessions started to 
build up. The key takeaways for me were the information about types of 
feedback, optimal feedback and the concepts of internal and external 
workflows..My excitement for the next six months, is about the activities that 
take place in carpentries and how to scout for interesting feedback from the 
same so as to contribute towards the betterment of The Carpentries core values.


Naoe Tatara


I have been serving as the Carpentries regional coordinator for the Nordic 
countries for approximately 1 year now. I also act as a local coordinator of 
Carpentries-related activities at the University of Oslo as a staff at the 
University of Oslo Library of Medicine and Science, Digital Scholarship Center. 
In addition, I am working for a project CodeRefinery (coderefiner.org), which 
provides training opportunities on learning best practice of FAIR software 
development and management and promoting. Having these roles gives me a unique 
opportunity to hear various feedback to the Carpentries from many different 
perspectives; learners, helpers, instructors, host, instructor-trainers, member 
sites, and even more. This is exactly the reason why I applied to this program. 
We learned theories of feedback and practical manners on scouting feedback 
during the onboarding. But on top of that, I really liked the definition of 
“community - a place where members feel a sense of belonging and a desire to 
work together towards shared goals”. The Carpentries is a global, huge, and 
warm community. I am happy to have the opportunity to contribute to making this 
community even more inclusive by catching valuable feedback and delivering it 
to the Carpentries.


Annajiat Alim Rasel


I am fascinated by the core values of The Carpentries: openness, empowering one 
another, valuing all contributions, always learning, inclusivity, putting 
people first, accessibility, collaboration, and diversity. Since learning about 
The Carpentries in 2017, I have observed these practices closely from different 
perspectives. I found the community welcoming, accommodating, research driven, 
and encouraging. The unlimited energy and the dedication that the community 
members demonstrated, made me learn more and more about The Carpentries. These 
inspired me to seek more avenues to learn and to contribute. I am excited to be 
a part of the learning journey with the community that spans seven continents 
including Antarctica. I learnt something new from every engagement with the 
community: the instructor certifications with scholarship, hosting and 
participating in the lively community discussions, CarpentryCon@Home, 
Instructor Development Committee (IDC), teaching and volunteer opportunities, 
contributing to hpc-carpentry and other lesson development, online teaching 
bonus module, providing feedback to posts on different platforms, etc.


I thank my instructors who had an infinite amount of patience to answer the 
questions and provided numerous feedback. I was fortunate to be a co-instructor 
where I received honest feedback from the participants and the colleagues on 
how to improve myself. I am grateful for this opportunity to serve as a part of 
The Carpentries Community Feedback Facilitators Program, excited to be a part 
of the initiative to improve the trainings and overall community experience, 
and in turn touching the lives of the people from all around the world! I hope 
to learn how to make my own feedback better through this experience as well.


Benson Muite


Certified Carpentries Instructor. Interested in improving the Carpentries 
experience. Would like to learn more about Carpentries workflows. I am also 
interested in lesson development and improvement. During the onboarding Theory 
of feedback was especially insightful, it was also nice to meet other people in 
the Carpentries community from different parts of the world.


Mike Henry


I am a certified Carpentries instructor trainer. I have always appreciated how 
frequent The Carpenters solicits and acts on feedback, whether that be during a 
workshop with sticky notes, a post workshop survey, or a request for comment 
(RFC) on a policy change. This keeps The Carpentries a community lead 
organisation where everyone has a voice in governance. I really enjoyed 
learning about more formal ways to discuss feedback and working with the Center 
for Scientific Collaboration and Community Engagement (CSCCE). I am excited to 
be a part of the initial cohort and help to develop the practices The 
Carpentries will use to act on feedback from the community.


Annalisa Milano


I have been following the Carpentries since the start of my role as Training 
Impact coordinator in Bioinformatics training for a European project and for 
the University. I am personally interested in feedback at all levels as a way 
to continuously improve communication and best practices. I am glad of this 
opportunity to contribute to this community.


Livingstone Ndigezza


I joined The Carpentries with a desire to learn and pass on knowledge to the 
young researchers in East Africa, specifically in and around Makerere 
University, where I see some skills faps in relation to data in their research 
fields. I am so passionate about community events hosting but most importantly 
ensuring that quality and guided learning in research is ensured. This program 
will help me understand The Carpentries community more in-depth.


A big thank you to Preethy Nair for her active participation and feedback 
during the onboarding process, and to Kari Jordan, Lou Woodley and Camille 
Santistevan from the CSCCE for working with me (Serah Rono) to write the 
Feedback Facilitation module of the Carpentries Community Facilitators program 
and onboard this first cohort.


Questions?


Look out for updates and invitations to collaborate from our Feedback 
Facilitators in the coming months. In the meantime, please reach outreach out 
via email 
<mailto:[email protected]?subject=Interest%20in%20co-creating%20Community%20Facilitators%20Program%20resources>
 if you have any questions or ideas about the new Community Facilitators 
Program, or if you are keen to be involved in the six remainng modules of the 
program in the coming months.


Happy days!



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