You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
Librarians regularly create bespoke workshop content on topics that are relevant to Carpentries topics and live outside of the Carpentries. In some cases this is content that is a variation or improvement of Carpentries content or just a new topic that might be of interest to our community. In some cases there appear to be unclear hurdles for some to contribute work back to the community, particularly work that iterates on and improves core curricular content. Understanding and addressing these hurdles may help us boost our maintainer community and benefit from content that has been positively iterated on.
In addition to this not all content needs to necessarily live in the Carpentries curriculum, particularly if it is already a part of a bespoke well-maintained curriculum. In those cases developing a rubric for determining which content is relevant to our community and listing it as partner content may be effective and beneficial.
This project has two parts: 1) a series of semi-formal interviews with librarians active in Carpentries relevant content creation to better understand hurdles to community participation 2) the development of a light rubric for determining when external content is helpful to list and promote to the Carpentries community.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
if you need more hands, I'm keen to get involved with working out how to get more of this going & ghe right way at my workplace so would be happy to test stuff out in the wild/help/brainstorm @egrguric & @sarasrking
Librarians regularly create bespoke workshop content on topics that are relevant to Carpentries topics and live outside of the Carpentries. In some cases this is content that is a variation or improvement of Carpentries content or just a new topic that might be of interest to our community. In some cases there appear to be unclear hurdles for some to contribute work back to the community, particularly work that iterates on and improves core curricular content. Understanding and addressing these hurdles may help us boost our maintainer community and benefit from content that has been positively iterated on.
In addition to this not all content needs to necessarily live in the Carpentries curriculum, particularly if it is already a part of a bespoke well-maintained curriculum. In those cases developing a rubric for determining which content is relevant to our community and listing it as partner content may be effective and beneficial.
This project has two parts: 1) a series of semi-formal interviews with librarians active in Carpentries relevant content creation to better understand hurdles to community participation 2) the development of a light rubric for determining when external content is helpful to list and promote to the Carpentries community.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: