Research Management » History » Version 15

Version 14 (Steve Welburn, 2012-11-19 12:10 PM) → Version 15/25 (Steve Welburn, 2012-11-19 12:12 PM)

h2. Research Management

The data management concerns of a PI will largely revolve around [[Before_The_Research|planning]] and appraisal of data management for research projects - both to make sure that they conform with "institutional policy":http://www.arcs.qmul.ac.uk/policy_zone/index.html#research and "funder requirements":http://researchonline.lshtm.ac.uk/208596/ and to ensure that the data management needs of the research project are met.

A data management plan (e.g. for use in a grant proposal) will show that you have considered:
* the costs of preserving your data;
* [[Research_Council_Requirements|funder requirements]] "funder requirements":http://researchonline.lshtm.ac.uk/208596/ for data preservation and publication;
* institutional data management [[Research_data_policies|policy]]
* and ethical issues surrounding data management (e.g. data relating to human participants).

The "DCC DMP Online":https://dmponline.dcc.ac.uk/ tool provides a series of questions which allow the user to build a data management plan which will match research council requirements.

Areas of interest may involve:
* [[legislation|legalities]] (Freedom of Information, Copyright and Data Protection)
* data management plan
** covering the [[research council requirements]]
** [[During_The_Research|during the project]]
** [[Archiving_research_data|data archiving]]
** [[Publishing_research_data|data publication]]
* After the project is completed, an appraisal of how the data was managed should be carried out as part of the project's "lessons learned"

Data management training should provide an overview of all the above, and keep PIs informed of any changes in the above that affect data management requirements.