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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 Collaboration Finding Partners in the World of Research Data Management
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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 What is Collaboration? A process where two or more people or organizations work together to realize shared goals (Wikipedia) To work together, especially in a joint intellectual effort (Free Online Dictionary) To cooperate with an agency or instrumentality with which one is not immediately connected (Merriam-Webster)
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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 Why Collaborate? Research data management is a complex set of activities; no one entity can do it alone Partners can bring a diverse set of skills Share the benefits (as well as the risks) Without collaboration, it won’t get done Libraries have a history of collaboration – Data Liberation Initiative – This workshop Collaboration provides benefits to all partners
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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 Potential Partners On campus – In the Library Systems/IT Subject specialists – Research Office – Graduate Studies – Computing Services – Ethics boards – Research institutes
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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 Inter-library Partners Other CARL institutions Regional library associations and their members – COPPUL – OCUL – CREPUQ – APLA Specialised libraries (eg. Parliament) Archives (municipal, provincial and federal) Library service providers
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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 External Partners Funding agencies – SSHRC, CIHR, NSERC – Provincial government bodies – Foundations and other sources of financial assistance International Data organizations – ICPSR, CESSDA, IFDO, UKDA, DANS, DCC All provide training materials Existing data storage centres – (eg. Physics, Astronomy, Genomics)
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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 Examples of External Partnerships Standards groups – provide guidance for metadata – NISO – Data Documentation Initiative (DDI) – Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems (CCSDS) – Open Biological and Biomedical Ontology (OBO) – Consortia Advancing Standards in Research Administration Information (CASRAI) Research Data Canada – providing a collaborative venue for RDM – Granting councils – CANARIE – Canada’s high-speed internet provider – CISTI – Canda’s national science library (National Research Council) – CFI – Canadian Foundation for Innovation – CUCCIO – Canadian University Council of Chief Information Officers
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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 Informal Collaborations Other data colleagues – Use them to discuss new projects Form informal partnerships and share ideas and tasks IASSIST - (International Association for Social Science Information and Technology) – Community of practice for data professionals – Excellent sounding boards, source of support – Great source of ideas – Wonderful membership
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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 IASSIST 2014: Toronto Great opportunity to broaden your network beyond our borders Kevin, Berenica and Walter will be hosting Chuck is the program chair Something for everyone at every level
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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 Planning Collaborative Activities Think of the 4 service areas from Exercise 1 and your local data landscape Think of your 3-year plan Is there one activity or set of activities that stands out with which you need a collaborator? Use the template as a guide
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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 Data Liberation as an Example of a Successful Collaboration Lessons learned – Have a clear vision of what you want to accomplish: make sure there is a need – Choose your partners wisely: SSFC was instrumental in the lobbying (helped that they represented 25,000 SS researchers); had internal support from Statistics Canada senior manager (Ernie Boyko) and Carleton’s CCS Director – Be willing to modify the procedures, NOT the vision – Do as much proof of concept as possible beforehand: anticipate arguments (prepare like you’re defending a thesis) – Be patient: it took 49 months from the first paper to acceptance of DLI as a partnership between the academics and Statistics Canada – Conduct periodic, systematic evaluations once the project is underway
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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 CARL Research Data Management Services Example Collaboration Template Need University Partners/ Internal and External Non-university Partners Benefits to the PartnersLibrary’s contributionDesired Outcome To acquire funding for a bilingual research data management pilot Internal Research Office To provide grant oversight Library Systems To provide IT infrastructure External To provide the French component of the pilot SSHRC/NSERC/CIHR To provide funding to finance the pilot. Pilot scope will determine which granting agency will be chosen. Research Office To be an active partner in a new service to researchers on campus. Library Systems Fosters a closer relationship between the Library and the Research Office Granting agency Helps fulfill their mandate to make publicly-funded data available for reuse Grant-writing Research Data Management expertise Provision of bilingual research data preservation and access services in a pilot format Enough money to fund a successful pilot project.
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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 Deconstructing the Template Need should be well-defined and articulated University partners should not be limited to your campus Non-university partners should have a well- defined stake in the project Benefits should be real and concrete for all parties Your library’s contribution should be substantial Desired outcome must be achieveable
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Introduction to Research Data Management Services, January 2013 Questions?
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