This site uses cookies

Some of these cookies are essential, while others help us to improve your experience by providing insights into how the site is being used.

For more detailed information please check our Cookie notice


Necessary cookies

Necessary cookies enable core functionality. This website cannot function properly without these cookies.


Cookies that measure website use

If you provide permission, we will use Google Analytics to measure how you use the website so we can improve it based on our understanding of user needs. Google Analytics sets cookies that store anonymised information about how you got to the site, the pages you visit, how long you spend on each page and what you click on while you’re visiting the site.

Reproducibility Bootcamp – online

26 Apr 2022 - 24 May 2022 9:45 am - 12:00 pm
Online
Training
Data skills
Workshop

Dr J. Kasmire, of the UK Data Service, is running a course for the National Centre for Research Methods (NCRM) from 26 April to 24 May 2022.

Ideally, research is collaborative, well-documented, sharable, and can be reproduced by others (or by the original researchers at a later point in time). Not only does this make a researcher’s job MUCH easier, it makes their work more valuable, citable and extensible. This is increasingly important in light of the ‘crisis of reproducibility’ that risks undermining scientific research in so many fields.

This training series walks you through how to:

  • make your research ready for open science
  • apply reproducibility to social science and other “tricky” topics
  • collaborate, document and share research in diverse contexts

This course, provided by the UK Data Service, assumes no prior knowledge or experience but is not a comprehensive training course covering every possible application for the topics included. Rather it has been designed to be an intensive experience which will help you develop a deep awareness of why reproducibility matters, how to build it into every aspect of a research programme, and how to be confident that others can reproduce your work through the materials and information that you share.

For participants to get the best out of the programme, they will need to engage in multiple ways during the bootcamp (and the week before it starts). The programme is built on group instruction, independent work done out of instruction hours, and involvement in the online community built around the programme. It is vital therefore that you are able to commit at least 6 hours a week to the programme and we ask that you consider your ability to make that commitment before submitting your application for a place.

Schedule

Each week of activity in this bootcamp will comprise a range of components, some synchronous (e.g. workshop sessions led by the instructors and delivered over Zoom) and some asynchronous (e.g. video-recorded talks, contributing to discussion boards, completing work independently in small groups, etc). Each week you will be :

  • joining one synchronous session from 09:45 - 12:00 (BST) every Tuesday from 26 April 2022 - 24 May 2022
  • engaging in set tasks to support the learning for that week (at a time convenient to you)
  • actively participating in group work during the week
  • office hours style support 12:45 - 15:00 every Wednesday and additional materials will be made available each week

Due to the nature of the this of this course and the requirement to participate in independent and group work you must be able to make a solid commitment to not only attend all live sessions but also have 4-6 hours each week to complete all tasks.

Participants will be asked to do a small amount of work between instruction days (e.g. read articles, watch videos, run code, create and edit github repos, etc.) and so some free and open source software installation may be required. The full list of what software is required will be provided prior to the start of the bootcamp. The course is charged at a full 5-day rate.

A slack channel will be created for bootcamp participants to provide accessible resources and peer-to-peer support as well as a place to ask advance questions for the course instructors and to collaborate on out-of-instruction work. Slack can be installed as a desktop app or accessed via a web browser. Registration with Slack will be required but is free.

Cost

For students registered at UK/EU University £150.00
For staff at UK academic institutions, ESRC funded researchers and registered charity organisations £300.00
For all other participants £500.00

NCRM bursaries are available for research staff.

See the NCRM website for more information and booking