Library Faculty/Staff Scholarship and Research
Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://hdl.handle.net/1903/11
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Item Starting and Sustaining a Coding Workshop for Librarians(2015) Nilsen, KarlAs academic practices are rapidly transformed by information technologies, many aspects of librarianship are increasingly inseparable from data manipulation and software development. This transformation is putting pressure on librarians to acquire coding skills and knowledge. This presentation describes a successful coding workshop at an academic library that provide an interdisciplinary, collegial, and sustained context for skills development and knowledge sharing. We describe our goals, logistics, participation, technical and social lessons learned, and provide best practices. We also demonstrate how librarians are consequently inspired to use their new skills and knowledge in their work.Item Stewarding Systems: Database Curation and Preservation(2014-08) Nilsen, KarlItem From Formats to Systems: Preserving a Relational Database for Extragalactic Distances(2014-06) Dasler, Robin; Nilsen, KarlItem ORCID Primer for Administrators and Librarians(2014) Nilsen, KarlItem ORCID Primer for Faculty and Students(2014) Nilsen, KarlItem Research Data Management: Practical Strategies for Information Professionals edited by Joyce M. Ray(Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication, 2014-03-31) Nilsen, KarlItem Beyond the Repository: Rethinking Data Services at the University of Maryland(Special Libraries Association, 2013-07) Dasler, Robin; Munoz, Trevor; Nilsen, KarlIn recent years, academic libraries have become increasingly concerned with data management and data curation. When asked by campus administration to help develop support for data management and data-driven research on campus, librarians from the University of Maryland consciously sought to develop active, perhaps even interventionist, approaches to data. This paper describes both the benefits and the challenges encountered during the development of a ‘business case’ for the research data services program.Item The Position of Library-Based Data Services: What Funding Data Can Tell Us(2013) Nilsen, Karl; Dasler, Robin; Muñoz, Trevor; Hovde, SarahAs academic research libraries develop services to support data management and curation, understanding the demand from researchers for new services and establishing parameters for pilot projects are key challenges for managers. Data about proposals and awards for research funding provide evidence about the potential scale, scope, and institutional location of research and data production. Information obtained from funding data can complement and contextualize insights obtained directly from individual researchers about their data management needs. This poster reports on an analysis of funding data conducted by librarians at the University of Maryland, College Park. The authors aimed to discover what funding data can tell librarians about the demand for data management support and the potential challenges for library-based services. The authors also sought to understand the limitations of funding data as a source of information.