Community-Based Research, Canadian Experiences in CU Research Partnerships, Presentation to Standing Committee on University Teaching and Research - July , 2010
Growing Communities in the Arts and Humanities. The experience of the DARIAH-...Francesca Morselli
DARIAH-EU is the European research infrastructure for the arts and humanities. In 2016 it was recognised as an ERIC5 and it comprises 17 Members and several Cooperating Partners in eight non-member countries. The activities of DARIAH comprise four main strands, namely: 1. training and education; 2. resources, tools and methods made available by and for the research community; 3. policy and advocacy support (on topics such as open science); and finally, 4. a growing transnational community of researchers.
This paper will focus on the fourth aspect and aims at exploring the case study of the DARIAH-EU Working Groups (henceforth WG) as a model in which research communities organize themselves, given the boundaries and the assets provided by a research infrastructure such as DARIAH. The DARIAH-EU WG are transnational, grass-rooted, self-organized, collaborative groups which have their roots in existing communities of practice. They form the heart of the DARIAH-ERIC community, but at the same time they maintain the existing ties with the (national and local) institutions where the WG members are based.
The creation of new DARIAH WGs follows the need of communities to foster innovative scholarly practices and to provide the infrastructure to support them. In turn, participation in existing WGs is a means to consolidate infrastructure and scholarship in certain areas of research, and to create or reinforce the network of expertise inside DARIAH. The WG level enables an organizational structure which is not just flexible and dynamic, but also driven by feedback and as such it helps DARIAH to be sustainable. Furthermore the value of the working groups lies in the fact they allow a better alignment between research institutions functioning on a national basis (universities, data centers, data archives, libraries, archives, projects etc...) and the research interests that emerge in international collaborations - the WGs are therefore able to optimize their own research environment by harnessing both national and international horizons.
In addition, the work of the WGs is considered so central in the development of the Research Infrastructure that in 2017 DARIAH-EU established a funding scheme to provide financial support for their activities, including travel to WG meetings, core developments such as the creation of tools, policy documents or dissemination material.
This paper will therefore examine the European landscape of the DARIAH WGs, firstly
by charting their evolution since 2015 and secondly, by identifying those dynamics of
the research community that are the basis for successful collaboration, exchange of
information and experiences.
This presentation also aims to reflect on what the challenges are in the creation and
maintenance of such dispersed communities, and therefore it wishes to contribute to
a fruitful discussion with other national and international experiences.
Open Science and Citizen Science - researcher, participants, and institutiona...Muki Haklay
Presentation from the OECD workshop on 9th April 2018, GSF-NESTI Workshop on "Reconciling Scientific Excellence and Open Science" asked the question "What do we want out of science and how can we incentivise and monitor these outputs?". The talk covers the personal experience as a researcher, the experience of participants in citizen science projects, and the institutional aspects.
Community-Based Research, Canadian Experiences in CU Research Partnerships, Presentation to Standing Committee on University Teaching and Research - July , 2010
Growing Communities in the Arts and Humanities. The experience of the DARIAH-...Francesca Morselli
DARIAH-EU is the European research infrastructure for the arts and humanities. In 2016 it was recognised as an ERIC5 and it comprises 17 Members and several Cooperating Partners in eight non-member countries. The activities of DARIAH comprise four main strands, namely: 1. training and education; 2. resources, tools and methods made available by and for the research community; 3. policy and advocacy support (on topics such as open science); and finally, 4. a growing transnational community of researchers.
This paper will focus on the fourth aspect and aims at exploring the case study of the DARIAH-EU Working Groups (henceforth WG) as a model in which research communities organize themselves, given the boundaries and the assets provided by a research infrastructure such as DARIAH. The DARIAH-EU WG are transnational, grass-rooted, self-organized, collaborative groups which have their roots in existing communities of practice. They form the heart of the DARIAH-ERIC community, but at the same time they maintain the existing ties with the (national and local) institutions where the WG members are based.
The creation of new DARIAH WGs follows the need of communities to foster innovative scholarly practices and to provide the infrastructure to support them. In turn, participation in existing WGs is a means to consolidate infrastructure and scholarship in certain areas of research, and to create or reinforce the network of expertise inside DARIAH. The WG level enables an organizational structure which is not just flexible and dynamic, but also driven by feedback and as such it helps DARIAH to be sustainable. Furthermore the value of the working groups lies in the fact they allow a better alignment between research institutions functioning on a national basis (universities, data centers, data archives, libraries, archives, projects etc...) and the research interests that emerge in international collaborations - the WGs are therefore able to optimize their own research environment by harnessing both national and international horizons.
In addition, the work of the WGs is considered so central in the development of the Research Infrastructure that in 2017 DARIAH-EU established a funding scheme to provide financial support for their activities, including travel to WG meetings, core developments such as the creation of tools, policy documents or dissemination material.
This paper will therefore examine the European landscape of the DARIAH WGs, firstly
by charting their evolution since 2015 and secondly, by identifying those dynamics of
the research community that are the basis for successful collaboration, exchange of
information and experiences.
This presentation also aims to reflect on what the challenges are in the creation and
maintenance of such dispersed communities, and therefore it wishes to contribute to
a fruitful discussion with other national and international experiences.
Open Science and Citizen Science - researcher, participants, and institutiona...Muki Haklay
Presentation from the OECD workshop on 9th April 2018, GSF-NESTI Workshop on "Reconciling Scientific Excellence and Open Science" asked the question "What do we want out of science and how can we incentivise and monitor these outputs?". The talk covers the personal experience as a researcher, the experience of participants in citizen science projects, and the institutional aspects.
This presentation by Maria Benes, a PhD student at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, was presented at the Daugherty Water for Food Global Institute’s Research Forum on Thursday, May 11, 2017. Maria is a 2016-2017 student support grantee of the Institute.
Reflections on Open Educational Practice Nick Sheppard
Slides from a presentation by Antonio Martínez-Arboleda on 18 January 2022: A global challenge: digital and open education for inclusive societies
Antonio Martínez-Arboleda is Academic Lead for Open Educational Practice and Co-Director of the Centre for Research in Digital Education of the University of Leeds. Antonio has been a champion and practitioner of open education since 2009, initially as part of the Humbox team and co-researcher of the JISC funded project OpenLIVES on Digitised Life Stories. His scholarship focuses on the areas of OER (Open Educational Resources) and Critical Digital Pedagogies.
Barriers to Ratification of the Marrakesh TreatyStephen Wyber
Presentation at European Parliament, 29 February 2017. Covers issues around additional remuneration of rightholders, commercial availability checks, mandatory registration and record-keeping requirements
UNESCO OER Way Forward @ eLearning Africa 2008Catriona Savage
"A Way Forward for Open Educational Resources: deliberations of an international community." Presentation given by Catriona Savage (UNESCO) at the MERLOT Africa Network's First Pan-African Forum on OER and OA, eLearning Africa, Accra, Ghana on 28 May 2008.
This presentation by Maria Benes, a PhD student at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, was presented at the Daugherty Water for Food Global Institute’s Research Forum on Thursday, May 11, 2017. Maria is a 2016-2017 student support grantee of the Institute.
Reflections on Open Educational Practice Nick Sheppard
Slides from a presentation by Antonio Martínez-Arboleda on 18 January 2022: A global challenge: digital and open education for inclusive societies
Antonio Martínez-Arboleda is Academic Lead for Open Educational Practice and Co-Director of the Centre for Research in Digital Education of the University of Leeds. Antonio has been a champion and practitioner of open education since 2009, initially as part of the Humbox team and co-researcher of the JISC funded project OpenLIVES on Digitised Life Stories. His scholarship focuses on the areas of OER (Open Educational Resources) and Critical Digital Pedagogies.
Barriers to Ratification of the Marrakesh TreatyStephen Wyber
Presentation at European Parliament, 29 February 2017. Covers issues around additional remuneration of rightholders, commercial availability checks, mandatory registration and record-keeping requirements
UNESCO OER Way Forward @ eLearning Africa 2008Catriona Savage
"A Way Forward for Open Educational Resources: deliberations of an international community." Presentation given by Catriona Savage (UNESCO) at the MERLOT Africa Network's First Pan-African Forum on OER and OA, eLearning Africa, Accra, Ghana on 28 May 2008.
We're helping the next generation of agency talent by participating in an agency simulation for Solent University with a part real brief for isle of Wight Tourism.
Presentazione dei risultati di una ricerca condotta su un campione di Università europee per analizzare come i social media possono contribuire alle strategie di public engagement pianificate.
The case for continuing education, community-based research and engaged scholarship as a means to provide education for the public good in Canada and elsewhere
An introduction to the Youth Economic Participation Initiative, as presented in March 2015 at the Comparative and International Education Society conference in Washington, DC. The presentation includes a look at critical institutional factors, strategies for supporting emerging entrepreneurs, engagement of key communities, and fostering of a community of practice.
Prof Michael Cuthill- University/Community Engagement in AustraliacommunityUOW
Community-based research in Australian universities: Reflections on national policy, institutional strategy and research practice.
Community-based research (CBR) is one important expression of university community engagement. It draws together the public good mission of the university with a scholarly intent. This presentation will provide a brief outline of the current policy, institutional and practice settings for CBR in Australia. The main focus will describe the underlying values, methodologies and methods employed by researchers in this area, and how genuine relationships between universities and communities can be fostered through CBR
International collaboration in learning and teaching- Higher Education Ian Willis
Identifies key factors for success in international collaborations in HE (on three levels: personal, social institutional). Uses a UK - Pakistan case study. Draws on and develops theory. Emphasises the personal level
Key Message: We need an open peer-to-peer network to connect the stakeholders (e.g. Bitcoin), create synergies from the dispersed resources (e.g. BOINC), and multiply the opportunities along the chain. We need the Open Source University of the future.
EUA focus group hosted by the Open University of Catalonia
Barcelona, 19 January 2018.
By Anna-Lena Claeys-Kulik
Policy Coordinator,
European University Association (EUA)