1491250
doi
10.5281/zenodo.1491250
oai:zenodo.org:1491250
user-parthenos-training
user-luxosf2018
Introduction to Humanities Research Data Management
Ulrike Wuttke
University of Applied Sciences Potsdam
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
<p><strong>Slides from WORKSHOP - Introduction to Humanities Research Data Management (Part 1 Theory, Ulrike Wuttke) held at Luxembourg Open Science Forum, 15.11.2018</strong></p>
<p>Reusable, machine-readable data are one pillar of Open Science (Open Scholarship). Serving this data<br>
reuse aspect requires from researchers to carefully document their methods and to take good care of<br>
their research data. Due to this paradigm shift, for Humanities and Heritage researchers, activities and<br>
issues around planning, organizing, storing, and sharing data and other research results and products<br>
play an increasing role. Therefore, during two workshop sessions Ulrike Wuttke and Jochen Klar will dive<br>
with the participants into a number of topics, technologies, and methods that are connected with<br>
Humanities Research Data Management. The participants will acquire knowledge and skills that will<br>
enable them to draft their own executable research data management plan that will support the<br>
production of reusable, machine-readable data, a key prerequisite for conducting effective and<br>
sustainable projects. Topics that will be covered are theoretical reflections on the role of data within<br>
humanities research and cultural heritage studies, opportunities and challenges of eHumanities and<br>
eResearch, implementing the FAIR principles and relevant standards, and basics of Data Management<br>
Planning.</p>
<p><br>
<strong>Learning outcomes</strong>: Participants of this workshop will gain an overview about issues related to<br>
Humanities Research Data Management and learn about relevant tools and information resources.<br>
Through a hands-on session, the participants will be especially equipped and skilled to draft the nucleus<br>
of their own Research Data Management Plan.</p>
<p><br>
<strong>Structure of the workshop</strong>: The workshop will consist of two sessions. In the morning session, the<br>
basics of Humanities Research Data Management will be discussed with the participants using examples<br>
from various humanities backgrounds and projects. The afternoon session will be dedicated to handson<br>
data management planning using the data management planning tool RDMO. This supervised<br>
practical exercise will offer the participants the opportunity to learn by doing. Participants are<br>
encouraged to discuss data management issues related to their own projects (or project ideas) ideas<br>
and to contact the trainers beforehand.</p>
<p><strong>Audience</strong>: The workshop sessions are aimed at Digital Humanities and Cultural Heritage researchers<br>
and practitioners with who wish to learn how to enable good Research Data Management and the<br>
sharing and reuse of data from a humanities point of view. No special previous knowledge or<br>
programming skills are required.</p>
<p><br>
TRAINERS<br>
<strong>Ulrike Wuttke</strong> (Doctor of Literature, Universiteit Gent 2012, wuttke@fh-potsdam.de) is a medievalist and<br>
textual scholar by training. She contributes to projects and networks in digital preservation and digital<br>
arts and humanities via groups such as the Working Group Data Centres of the Verband Digital<br>
Humanities im deutschsprachigen Raum (deputy convenor). Her professional activities focus on training<br>
and personal counselling on data management, open science and Digital Humanities as well as public<br>
relations, communication and outreach. She joined the PARTHENOS project and FH Potsdam in April<br>
2017. She leads task 7.2 (Implementation of the Training plan) of the H2020 project PARTHENOS. She<br>
coordinates the further development of its online training platform, the PARTHENOS Training Suite, and<br>
the PARTHENOS eHumanities and eHeritage Webinar Series.</p>
<p><br>
<strong>Jochen Klar </strong>(PhD in numerical cosmology, University of Potsdam 2012, jklar@aip.de) works in the area of<br>
data management and eScience at the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP) and takes part in<br>
various data related projects, both in astrophysics as well as in interdisciplinary contexts. He was<br>
involved in the development of several astronomical data portals (e.g. RAVE, APPLAUSE, CosmoSim,<br>
GREGOR). For the DFG projects RADIESCHEN and DFG-VRE, he investigated the sustainability and the<br>
organizational structure of data management and virtual research environments in Germany. He is the<br>
main developer of the Daiquiri framework for the publication of astronomical databases and of the<br>
RDM-planning tool RDMO (Research Data Management Organiser).</p>
<p>Links:<br>
PARTHENOS Main Site: <a href="http://parthenos-project.eu/">http://parthenos-project.eu/</a><br>
PARTHENOS Training Suite: <a href="http://training.parthenos-project.eu/">http://training.parthenos-project.eu/</a><br>
RDMO Main Site: <a href="https://rdmorganiser.github.io/en/">https://rdmorganiser.github.io/en/</a></p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
The PARTHENOS project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 654119.
Zenodo
2018-11-19
info:eu-repo/semantics/lecture
1491249
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