Hi Andreas, I see you've already be directed towards the two resources I'm most familiar with:
FOSTER Open Science collaboration (https://www.fosteropenscience.eu/) - I have given "open source for open science" seminars at some of their events before. Sophie Kay (nee Kershaw's) Open Science Training course. Also, a group including Ivo Grigorov (DTU, Denmark and FOSTER) and Martin Hammitzsch (GFZ Potsdam, Germany) have been organising open science sessions at the European Geosciences Union annual meeting. Best regards, Neil On 23 May 2016 at 13:08, aleimba <[email protected]> wrote: > Dear Software Carpentry list members, > > we (the German OKFN Open Science working group, > http://www.ag-openscience.de) are starting a compendium for Open Science > teaching resources/material (compendium tentatively called "Open Science > 101"). Our audience would be (PhD) students, postdocs, and other researchers > at universities in order to supply them the tools and the will to follow > Open Science principles/practices in their research. > > This idea was born out of the frustration with the current state of Open > Science skills and their dissemination in the scientific community (also in > regard to the reproducibility crisis in many fields). > > The initial GitHub repo for the project can be found here: > https://github.com/OKScienceDE/Open_Science_101 > > Software/Data carpentry both serve as role models for our idea, especially > in hosting teaching material online on GitHub so it can be crowd-sourced. > > Thus, our first step is to collect already existing material or even lessons > on this topic. We don't want to reinvent the wheel and any feedback is > appreciated. I already asked around on Twitter > (https://twitter.com/aleimba/status/730758264548425728) and got some nice > recommendations. We now have a collection of material on the Open Science > Q&A site > (https://openscience.uni-bielefeld.de/898/which-materials-exist-introducing-specific-audiences-science) > born out of this repo issue > (https://github.com/OKScienceDE/Open_Science_101/issues/5). > > However, I thought I might broaden the audience with this mailing list (and > was nudged in this direction by one of your members, Philipp Bayer). Thus, I > have a couple of questions for you: > > - Do you know any additional initiatives or teaching resources that are > relevant to this topic? > - Do you think such an "Open Science 101" compendium/initiative is > worthwhile? > > If all pans out, we would also like to offer workshops/bootcamps with > volunteering teachers in the future (as you guys do). > > We've submitted our project to the Mozilla Science Global Sprint (Jun 2 - > Jun 3 2016), to have a starting point. We welcome anyone who would like to > contribute: https://github.com/mozillascience/global-sprint-2016/issues/36. > > Anyways, thanks a lot in advance. > > Best, > Andreas Leimbach > > P.S.: Software/Data Carpentry is awesome! ;-) > > -- > Andreas Leimbach > Universität Münster > Institut für Hygiene > Mendelstr. 7 > D-48149 Münster > Germany > > Tel.: +49 (0)551 39 33843 > E-Mail: [email protected] > Twitter: https://twitter.com/aleimba > GitHub: https://github.com/aleimba > _______________________________________________ > Discuss mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.software-carpentry.org/listinfo/discuss -- Neil Chue Hong Director, Software Sustainability Institute EPCC, University of Edinburgh, JCMB, Edinburgh, EH9 3FD, UK Tel: +44 (0)131 650 5957 http://www.software.ac.uk/ LinkedIn: http://uk.linkedin.com/in/neilchuehong Twitter: http://twitter.com/npch ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8876-7606 _______________________________________________ Discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.software-carpentry.org/listinfo/discuss
