Actual syllabus from Spring 2017 offering at MSU
Overview: Technology is changing science: increasing the amount of data we can handle, and providing us with new ways of analyzing and sharing our work. The internet has increased connectivity within the scientific community and between scientists and the public. Additionally, many granting agencies are now requiring that scientific work they fund is made publically available. Although daunting at times, taking an open-source, web-enabled approach to research presents an opportunity to both improve the reproducibility of scientific practice and to encourage broader participation in the scientific enterprise. Navigating this changing landscape effectively can help early career scientists handle their own data and statistical workflows more efficiently, build a network of collaborators, promote their own work, and engage in larger-scale problem solving. Using real, data driven examples from population and community ecology, this course will walk students through the process of scientific publication in this new, open, technologically enabled framework, and place technical skills in the context of reproducible research philosophy, ethics and regulations.
Instructor: Christie Bahlai
E-mail: cbahlai at msu dot edu
Office Hours: Immediately after class each Tuesday or by appt.
Offered: SS17 IBIO 890-602 2 Credits
Text: (Optional!) Kristin Briney, Data Management for Researchers: Organize, maintain and share your data for Research Success 2015. Pelagic Publishing, Exeter, UK
Meetings: Lecture T, Th 9:10AM - 10:00AM, Natural Sciences 145, Seminar Th 10:10AM- 12:00 PM Natural Sciences 203C
Course website: https://cbahlai.github.io/RQM_SS17/
Attendance policy: Your performance in this course will be proportional to the effort you put in- students are expected to attend class and engage in an earnest effort to master course material. This being said, please let me know if circumstances interfere with your ability to give this course your full attention.
Code of coduct: In brief, treat everyone (classmates, instructor, our external collaborators) with respect. Discrimination or harassment based on racial or ethnic background, citizenship status, religion (or lack thereof), political affiliation, gender identity/expression, sexual orientation, dis/ability status, appearance or body size will not be tolerated. Please make an effort to make an inclusive environment for everyone. Give everyone a chance to talk and an opportunity to contribute. Violations should be reported to the instructor. A SPECIAL NOTE: Your work in this class will be publicly available and recorded permanently on github. Please conduct yourself accordingly.
Graded work:
15% Discussion Participation
Participation in class discussions- asking meaningful questions, demonstrating critical thinking.
20% Reflections blog post
Each student will write 1-2 blog posts per semester summarizing the issues discussed during the seminar section of class. ~500-1000 words.
10% Progress blog posts
These are short, frequent blog posts designed to keep a written record of what each student has been working on and contributing to the final manuscript project. Think of this as a shared lab notebook- help your collaborators keep track of what you’re doing and what the next steps are.
40% Final manuscript
A real, bona-fide scientific manuscript. Students will be assigned small groups (3-5) and a set of real data, and students will be guided through the process of data management and documentation, a simple analysis, an experimental writeup, and submission of the manuscript to a peer reviewed, open-source journal. The goal with this paper is to create a research product that goes slightly beyond a ‘data paper.’ Students who are deemed to have contributed sufficiently by their peers will be awarded authorship if the manuscript is accepted for publication.
15% Collaborator assessment
Students will be evaluated by their peers for their level of contribution to the final manuscript product. Although I expect a fair bit of niche partitioning to occur in groups, students are expected to have left enough information about their respective roles so that group members are able to understand exactly what each other member did.
Grading:
The grading scale for this course will be:
100 - 93% = 4.0
92 - 85% = 3.5
84 - 80% = 3.0
79 - 75% = 2.5
74 - 70% = 2.0
69 - 65% = 1.5
64 - 60% = 1.0
below 60% = 0.0
Instructor will assess student effort and prior background in making final grading decisions. An earnest effort and a commitment to completing tasks to the best of a student's ability are key factors in earning a great grade in this class.