---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Anissa Tanweer <tanw...@uw.edu>
Date: Thu, May 3, 2018 at 11:35 AM
Subject: DSS May 9th @ 2:30pm: Libraries in the age of big data, data
science, and digital connectivity
To: escience_datasciencestud...@uw.edu


Dear Data Science Studies Community,


Please join us next week for our final meeting of the academic year, on
Wednesday, May 9th from 2:30-3:30 pm, in the Data Science Studio (6th Floor
of the Physics and Astronomy Tower <http://uw.edu/maps/?pat>).


*Libraries in the age of big data, data science, and digital connectivity:
Continuities, disruptions, and opportunities*


To understand the institutionalization of data science as an emergent
phenomenon in the academy, we must place it in context with the
institutions and practices that preceded it, co-exist alongside it, and
support it. Libraries have long been vanguards of many core values and
commitments that are regarded as integral to academic data science:
transparency, openness, access, information management and integrity,
version control, and reproducibility.


In this session, a panel of experts from UW Libraries and the Information
School will help us explore the continuities, disruptions, and
opportunities in libraries and librarianship in the age of big data, data
science, and digital connectivity. UW Data Management Librarian, Jenny
Muilenburg <http://guides.lib.uw.edu/friendly.php?s=research/jmuilenburg>,
will provide background and context that draws out the connections between
libraries and data science, and discuss relevant initiatives happening in
academic libraries around the world. Carole Palmer
<http://faculty.washington.edu/clpalmer/>, Professor and Associate Dean for
Research in the iSchool, will discuss the evolution of information schools
and the relationship between library science and emergent strengths in data
science. Chris Coward <https://tascha.uw.edu/people/chris-coward/>,
Director of the Technology and Social Change (TASCHA), will discuss what
his organization is doing to build data capacity in public libraries and
harness big data to support their viability and success. And UW
Librarians, Verletta
Kern <http://guides.lib.uw.edu/research/vkern> and Elliott Stevens
<https://guides.lib.uw.edu/prf.php?account_id=115813>, will offer an
example of some of the ways academic librarians are supporting the changing
needs of researchers in our current day and age by discussing an open
source project UW Libraries is launching to promote digital safety for open
researchers.

Hope to see you there!

-- 
Anissa Tanweer
PhD Candidate, Department of Communication
Research Assistant, Human-Centered Data Science Lab
Ethnographer, Data Science Studies, eScience Institute
University of Washington



-- 
Anissa Tanweer
PhD Candidate, Department of Communication
Research Assistant, Human-Centered Data Science Lab
Ethnographer, Data Science Studies, eScience Institute
University of Washington
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