
Photo credit : Graphics courtesy of Jennifer Gratton, in homage to original design for the UBCO Amp Lab
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May 21 and May 28, 2021 |
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Increasingly DH researchers have greater access to funding to support large-scale multi-partner projects with diverse digital assets. A lack of formal training opportunities for data curation in multi-site DH teams means that the data produced in these teams is in danger of being lost! This workshop is a good preparation for researchers who must create a data management plan to comply with funding agency requirements.
This workshop will cover all areas of data management including: IP permissions and informed consent, data collection, metadata standards, file sharing, preservation (data deposit), and data sharing through the open data spectrum of access.
Participants will work on their own data curation challenges in break-out sessions and with reference to case study examples presented by a panel of DH scholars and digital asset management specialists:
• Constance Crompton (University of Ottawa),
• Karis Shearer (University of British Columbia Okanagan Campus),
• Matthew Lincoln (Carnegie Mellon University),
• Mikhel Proulx (Concordia University and Indigenous Digital Art Archive)
Watch the recording
Download recording (.mov)
This workshop was originally developed and delivered at the 2019 Spoken Web Symposium: Resonant Practices In Communities of Sound. It draws significantly upon cases and RDM processes developed and in continued development, across the SpokenWeb research network.
Questions? Email Chantal Ripp, Research Data Management Librarian (interim) & Felicity Tayler, Interim Head, Research Support (Arts and Special Collections): rdm@uOttawa.ca
Speakers: Speaker biographies [PDF]
Facilitators: René Duplain, Roxanne Lafleur, Pascale Dangoisse, Fatoumata Bah, Sarah Simpkin, Chantal Ripp, Felicity Tayler, and Marjorie Mitchell.
Registration is closed.
The plenary will have no limit on registration. Registration to the workshops is limited to 60 participants.
This event is free of charge.
Program
Day 1: In addition to the plenary sessions for the whole group, 2 breakout sessions will be held where participants will work on their own data curation challenges. The same cohort of attendees will attend the breakouts together to ensure a continuity of the conversation.
*The plenary session will be offered in English with simultaneous interpretation in French. The workshops and breakout sessions will be offered in English only.*
Day 2: The participants along with the panel of DH scholars and digital asset management specialists will reconvene to co-develop a primer for DH researchers.
*The workshops and breakout sessions will be offered in English. No simultaneous translation will be offered*
May 21 2021 12:00 pm – 16:00 pm (Eastern Standard Time)
| 12:00 – 12:15 |
Welcoming remarks, with a view toward a collaboratively authored DH data primerSpeaker: C. Ripp |
| 12:15 – 13:15 |
Roundtable panel: “Learning from examples” DH data curation successes (and failures)● Constance Crompton: LINCS: Linked Infrastructure for Networked Cultural Scholarship Moderator: F. Tayler |
| 13:15-13:30 |
Break |
| 13:30- 14:00 |
What is your data? Introduction to data curation key concepts [Presentation materials]Participants will learn about how to recognize their digital humanities data, and why it is important to map their data work flow so they can make their data public! Introduction to data management plans in international contexts (DMPOnline (UK), DMPTool (USA); DMP Assistant (Canada) |
| 14:00-14:30 |
What is Your Data Flow and Discovery Model? [Data Flow and Discovery Model handout]In a breakout session, participants work individually or in a group. |
| 14:30-14:40 |
Break |
| 14:40-15:10 |
How to (ethically) make your data public [Presentation materials]Participants will learn how to map their data into 5 categories of access from secure & protected to open license Intro to Data Papers & Data Journals |
| 15:10-15:40 |
What is Your Spectrum of Data Access? [Data Flow and Discovery Model handout]In a breakout session, participants map their data flow models onto 5 categories of access from secure & protected to open license so that outputs such as linked open data, podcast, tutorials, exhibitions and other forms of knowledge mobilization can happen! |
| 15:40-16:00 |
Sharing & Feedback sessionBreak out group facilitators report on themes, sticking points or revelations in their breakout groups. |
| 16:00-16:15 |
Closing Remarks |
May 28 2021 12:00 pm – 15:00 pm (Eastern Standard Time)
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12:00- |
Welcoming Remarks |
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12:15- |
Highlights from workshop day 1 |
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12:30- |
Q&A |
|
12:45- |
Data primer overview: How collaborative editing will work Data Primer Full Manuscript [View only] |
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13:00- |
Breakout groups: |
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13:30- |
Break |
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13:45- |
Reconvene for Q&A and feed-back |
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14:00- |
Breakout groups: review/comment/edit assigned sections |
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14:30- |
Wrap-up: Next steps |
Making research data public: workshopping data curation for digital humanities projects is supported in part by funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.


