DataTrain » History » Version 11
Steve Welburn, 2012-06-29 04:16 PM
1 | 1 | Steve Welburn | h1. DataTrain |
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3 | 1 | Steve Welburn | (return to [[WP1_1_Research_Of_Available_Resources]]) |
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5 | 3 | Steve Welburn | DataTrain for "archaeology":http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/learning/DataTrain and for "social anthropology":http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/dataman/datatrain/socanthintro.html |
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7 | 2 | Steve Welburn | * DataTrain: research data managmeent training modules in Social Anthropology ("Jorum":http://dspace.jorum.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/15994) |
8 | 2 | Steve Welburn | * DataTrain: research data managmeent training modules in Archaeology ("Jorum":http://dspace.jorum.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/15992) |
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10 | 4 | Steve Welburn | h2. Archaeology |
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12 | 6 | Steve Welburn | Licensed CC-BY-NC-SA |
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14 | 9 | Steve Welburn | Structure of course: |
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16 | 4 | Steve Welburn | bq. Modules: |
17 | 4 | Steve Welburn | # Creating and managing research data in archaeology: an overview |
18 | 4 | Steve Welburn | # Data lifecycles and management plans |
19 | 4 | Steve Welburn | # Working with digital data |
20 | 4 | Steve Welburn | # Rights and digital data |
21 | 4 | Steve Welburn | # E-Theses and supplementary digital data |
22 | 4 | Steve Welburn | # Archiving digital data |
23 | 4 | Steve Welburn | # Post-Graduate data management plans |
24 | 4 | Steve Welburn | # Project and professional data: data management on post-doctoral research projects and beyond |
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26 | 5 | Steve Welburn | bq. The teaching modules were run as a trial course in March 2011, as part of a post-graduate course in Digital Skills for Dissertation and Publications, Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge. The data management course comprised 4 x 2 hour sessions: |
27 | 5 | Steve Welburn | # Creating and Managing Data - Defining post-graduate research data |
28 | 5 | Steve Welburn | # Working with Digital Data |
29 | 5 | Steve Welburn | File structure, naming, and formats |
30 | 5 | Steve Welburn | E-theses and supplementary digital data |
31 | 5 | Steve Welburn | Post-Graduate Data Management Plans |
32 | 5 | Steve Welburn | # Project and Professional Data |
33 | 5 | Steve Welburn | Data management for larger research projects |
34 | 5 | Steve Welburn | # Archiving and Re-using Data |
35 | 5 | Steve Welburn | Depositing digital data |
36 | 5 | Steve Welburn | Intellectual Property Rights and research data |
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38 | 7 | Steve Welburn | bq. The slides and notes have been kept as simple and as straight forward as possible. They are not meant to be exhaustive in the information they contain. Rather, they provide an overview of the general issues regarding data management. |
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40 | 6 | Steve Welburn | bq. Each module has been designed to take approximately 30 minutes to complete. Six of the eight presentations have between 10 and 16 slides (including front title and end acknowledgement slides). The two longer modules are Module 3: Working with Digital Data; and Module 8: Project and Professional Data. |
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42 | 6 | Steve Welburn | bq. Module 3 (Working with Digital Data) has 38 slides many of which contain a lot of information on different file types and formats. This information has been summarised from the Archaeology Data Service’s Guides to Good Practice, and content most relevant to post-graduate students is presented in a straight forward way. Rather that spending an hour presenting Module 3 in detail (and boring the students to death), it is suggested that the slides be presented as a ‘lightening tour’ of the practical issues of working with digital data. The slides can then be made available for future reference by the students as a handout. |
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44 | 6 | Steve Welburn | bq. Module 8 (Project and Professional Data) provides an introduction into data management at a higher level of research, including writing AHRC Technical Appendices. While this can be run as a stand alone session, given that this is the desired career path of many doctoral students, and the fact that many doctoral students carry out their research as part of larger projects, the aim of the module is to round off the post-graduate course by looking forward beyond the submission of a PhD Thesis. |
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46 | 10 | Steve Welburn | Comments regarding discipline-specific nature (from notes for part 1 of course): |
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48 | 8 | Steve Welburn | bq. Can archaeology be considered in any way a special case in terms of how we create, manage, and archive digital data? |
49 | 8 | Steve Welburn | The simple answer is no. The issues of how best to manage digital data and safeguard it preservation in the long term are broadly the same across all disciplines. |
50 | 8 | Steve Welburn | The same goes for individual archaeological projects. Even though some might think that their own project is a special case in terms of complicated digital data, or for the fact that they will produce very little in the way of digital data, at the heart of it, the same issues apply, just on a larger or smaller scale. |
51 | 8 | Steve Welburn | A key issue which does vary from discipline to discipline is that of what are private data and what are public data. This does arise in archaeology particularly in regard to sensitive data of site or artefact locations, or sensitive personal data collected during the course of a research project. |
52 | 8 | Steve Welburn | What perhaps sets archaeology apart from other disciplines is the appreciation of the historical significance of what we do. And the fact that very often, the practice of archaeology is a destructive process and the physical and digital data obtained represent a unique archive – an experiment that cannot be repeated. |
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54 | 11 | Steve Welburn | However... primary data is often paper-based. Notes, sketches etc. |
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56 | 11 | Steve Welburn | One area of discipline-specificness is the selection of bodies that provide definitions of good practise. Who are these for digital audio research ? AES ? JASA ? ISMIR ? IEEE ? Others ? |