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  • eScience, eResearch and Computational Problem Solving

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    By: Jan E. Odegard

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Training Aimed at Domain Experts

Module by: Alex Voss. E-mail the author

Summary: There is a need for training that is aimed at domain experts rather than e-Science developers.

Training offered is rarely tailored to the needs of researchers working in particular areas but is rather generic and technology-centric. This has the effect that training courses become less attractive for researchers and of making the learning outcomes less relevant for their day-to-day work.

"perhaps there’s a general need for more training that's aimed at the domain experts rather than e-Science experts." (researcher)

Enablers

  • Discipline-specific training programmes with content tailored to the specific needs of researchers can help to ensure that training is of interest and the outcomes practically applicable.
  • Hands-on support sessions can be used to add relevance to a generic training course that teaches the basics, while the subsequent support sessions add context and help researchers to apply what they have learned to their own research problems. The combination of these two styles can help overcome the problem that creating tailored training material for every conceivable research area would be too expensive and would cause problems with keeping material up to date.

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Definition of a lens

Lenses

A lens is a custom view of the content in the repository. You can think of it as a fancy kind of list that will let you see content through the eyes of organizations and people you trust.

What is in a lens?

Lens makers point to materials (modules and collections), creating a guide that includes their own comments and descriptive tags about the content.

Who can create a lens?

Any individual member, a community, or a respected organization.

What are tags? tag icon

Tags are descriptors added by lens makers to help label content, attaching a vocabulary that is meaningful in the context of the lens.

| External bookmarks

Module to:

My Favorites (?)

'My Favorites' is a special kind of lens which you can use to bookmark modules and collections. 'My Favorites' can only be seen by you, and collections saved in 'My Favorites' can remember the last module you were on. You need an account to use 'My Favorites'.

| A lens I own (?)

Definition of a lens

Lenses

A lens is a custom view of the content in the repository. You can think of it as a fancy kind of list that will let you see content through the eyes of organizations and people you trust.

What is in a lens?

Lens makers point to materials (modules and collections), creating a guide that includes their own comments and descriptive tags about the content.

Who can create a lens?

Any individual member, a community, or a respected organization.

What are tags? tag icon

Tags are descriptors added by lens makers to help label content, attaching a vocabulary that is meaningful in the context of the lens.

| External bookmarks