Difference between revisions of "Data Management Workshop"

From Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP)
Line 6: Line 6:
 
*Dave Anderson, NOAA/NCDC
 
*Dave Anderson, NOAA/NCDC
 
*Ken Casey, NOAA/NODC
 
*Ken Casey, NOAA/NODC
 +
*Ted Habermann, NOAA/NGDC
 
*Ruth Duerr, NSIDC/Chair, ESIP Data Preservation & Stewardship Cluster
 
*Ruth Duerr, NSIDC/Chair, ESIP Data Preservation & Stewardship Cluster
 
*Ron Weaver, NSIDC
 
*Ron Weaver, NSIDC
 +
*Bob Cook, ORNL
 
*Carol Meyer, staff
 
*Carol Meyer, staff
  

Revision as of 13:53, October 11, 2010

Background

The ESIP Federation, in cooperation with NOAA, seeks to share the community's knowledge with scientists who increasing need to be better data managers. Over the next several years, the ESIP Federation expects to evolve a training course which seeks to improve the understanding of scientific data management among scientists and emerging scientists. Initially, a one-half day workshop is being proposed to be held at the 2010 Fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU).

Advisory Team

  • Scott Hausman, NOAA/NCDC
  • Dave Anderson, NOAA/NCDC
  • Ken Casey, NOAA/NODC
  • Ted Habermann, NOAA/NGDC
  • Ruth Duerr, NSIDC/Chair, ESIP Data Preservation & Stewardship Cluster
  • Ron Weaver, NSIDC
  • Bob Cook, ORNL
  • Carol Meyer, staff

Draft AGU Workshop Proposal

Writing Your Data Management Plan

Whether you need to include a data management plan in your NSF proposal, want to make data exchange in your field as transparent as possible, or just aim to maximize the visibility of your science in the Internet World, this one-half day workshop is for you. Earth scientists face increasing pressure to share their results not just in journals, but in many other settings. Data produced sometimes long ago for one purpose are now being successfully applied to emerging problems in entirely different disciplines. A concrete data management plan can make you more visible, more successful, and increase the impact of your science. In this Earth Science Information Partners-sponsored workshop (ESIP), representatives from NOAA, NASA, and other data archive centers will provide an overview into the world of successful data stewardship, examine emerging standards and trends, and provide concrete steps for managing your Earth Science data. We will conclude with a question and answer session.


(RON's edited version --- I'm too feeble of brain to figure out color change, so I've simply taken above text and copied it here with my edits in <>)

Whether you need to include a data management plan in your NSF proposal, want to make data exchange in your field as transparent as possible, or just aim to maximize the visibility of your science in the Internet World, this <deleted stuff> workshop is for you. Earth scientists face increasing pressure to share their results not just in journals, but in many other settings. Data produced sometimes long ago for one purpose are now being successfully applied to emerging problems in entirely different disciplines. A concrete data management plan <developed early in your research project> can make you <and your data> more visible, more successful, and increase the impact of your science.

In this Earth Science Information Partners-sponsored workshop (ESIP), representatives from NOAA, NASA, and other data archive centers will provide an overview into the world of successful data stewardship, examine emerging standards and trends, and provide concrete steps for managing your Earth Science data. <We will present our roadmap to completion of the recently distributed NSF data management requirement> We will conclude with a question and answer session. <We expect this workshop to be of 2-3 hours duration.>

AGU Guidelines

Criteria for External Events at AGU