About the Event
The ARDC Community Data Lab (CDL) provides tools, datasets, analysis environments and collaboration options for humanities, arts, social sciences, and Indigenous research in Australia. As CDL enters its second phase, it will focus on co-designing 5 new capabilities to support research and research translation.
The ARDC invites you to a workshop to co-design one of these capabilities: A national service to publish enduring HASS and Indigenous data collections as websites via a sustainable model that aligns with the FAIR Principles.
The goal of the co-design workshop is to evaluate this co-investment opportunity to help develop a solution that supports new and expanded research.
Value of Capability to HASS and Indigenous Research
A common requirement for HASS and Indigenous research is the ability to make digital cultural collections available online. Bespoke solutions are frequently short-lived due to maintenance demands. This makes it challenging for researchers to process, publish and maintain enduring collections of research consistent with FAIR principles. A national service will enable researchers to publish websites with their research archives and collections.
What to Expect During the Workshop
Workshop participants are invited to actively engage in discussions. During the workshop, participants will be introduced to the problem to be addressed, along with the capability that we are proposing to develop as a solution to this problem for HASS and Indigenous research.
The workshop will be held virtually via Zoom. Participants will join breakout rooms and respond to questions using a Miro board. Our goal is to gather feedback on the value of the proposed solution and to assess whether we’re addressing the problem in the most effective way.
The proposed solution has been developed by ARDC in partnership with Sydney Informatics Hub, University of Sydney.
After the workshop we will publish a report that captures the input that we have received. Your insights will help us refine our approach, ensuring that we are on the right track.
If you have difficulty accessing Zoom or Miro please let us know ahead of the workshop and we will provide alternative methods for you to provide your feedback.
Learn more about the ARDC Community Data Lab and the co-design process for phase 2 by watching the recording of our recent webinar, or viewing the slides.
Who will be speaking?
- Ellen Lyrtzis, Skills Development Lead (NCRIS), ARDC
- Michael Lynch, Research Engineer Group Lead, Sydney Informatics Hub, The University of Sydney
Who should attend?
- HASS researchers who need to create a website to publish their data and document their workflows and/or tools (e.g. as an output of a project)
- Researchers who are interested in discovering data, tools and guides that may support their HASS and Indigenous research workflows
- People who support researchers in their use of digital research infrastructure (including research infrastructure providers and digital skills trainers)
What participants will gain from the session?
- Contribute your use cases and experience about the capability
- Discuss the capability and the challenges it addresses with your peers
- Help shape how the capability will be delivered for HASS & I researchers
Join More Co-design Workshops for the ARDC Community Data Lab
The second phase of the CDL is focusing on co-designing 5 new capabilities to support research and research translation. Join other co-design sessions relevant to your research and work:
- Public Interest Documents: help co-design an easy-to-use curated national Hansard dataset for research. Tuesday 25 Feb, 12 noon AEDT – register now >
- Framework For Research Software Engineers: help co-design a framework for recommended patterns in software engineering when working with HASS and Indigenous data. Friday 14 March, 12 noon AEDT – register now
- Tools and Workflows for Visualising and Analysing Data Stored in RO-Crates: help co-design research tools and workflows for visualising and analysing data stored in RO-Crates. Tuesday 18 March 12 noon AEDT – register now
- Research Tools for Digitised Documents: help co-design tools and workflows for extracting, processing and searching text information from low-quality images of digitised documents and hand-written text. Tuesday 25 March 12 noon AEDT – register now
Further HASS and Indigenous Research Data Commons resources
- ARDC Community Data Lab Project
- HASS and Indigenous Research Data Commons
- Resources for HASS and Indigenous research
Will the session be recorded?
To ensure participants’ privacy, we will not publish a recording of the workshop.
Have questions?
Email [email protected]
Please note that this event may be recorded and published by the ARDC. This may include your contributions during the session. ARDC respects the privacy of individuals. Information collected is in accordance with the ARDC Privacy Policy.