Managing your digital information (for PhD students in Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences)
Prevent research disasters through good data management
- How much information would you lose if your laptop was stolen?
- Have you ever emailed your colleague a file named 'final_final_versionEDITED'?
- Do you know what your funder expects you to do with your research information?
As a researcher, you will encounter research data in many forms, ranging from literature sources, interviews, measurements, numbers and images.
Whether you create, receive or collect this information, you will need to organise it.
Managing digital information properly is a complex issue. Doing it correctly from the start could save you a lot of time and hassle when preparing a publication or writing up your thesis.
- PhD students in HASS subjects
- Other PhD students and postdocs also welcome
Number of sessions: 1
# | Date | Time | Venue | Trainer | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Thu 31 Oct 2019 14:00 - 16:00 | 14:00 - 16:00 | 17 Mill Lane, Seminar Room E | map | Dr B. Gini |
In this introduction to managing digital information, we will cover
- Strategies for backing up your computer
- Strategies for naming and organising your files
- Strategies for file exchange with collaborators
- Funder requirements for making your digital information (or data) available
- How to write a Data Management Plan
Interactive workshop
When you attend an event run by the OSC, we add you to our mailing lists to keep you up-to-date on the latest developments and opportunities in the field of open research. We send one Research Data Newsletter and one Office of Scholarly Communication newsletter per month. You are welcome to unsubscribe from these lists at any point if you feel the information is not relevant to you.
- Please bring your own internet-enabled device to this session
One session of two hours
Once a term
- Open research and open minds: a Cambridge perspective on sharing research outputs (for PhD students in Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences)
- Books: publishing your research effectively (For PhD students in Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences)
- Copyright: a survival guide (for PhD students in Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences)
- Getting started with peer review (for early career researchers and third and fourth year PhD students in STEM disciplines)
- Journals: publishing your research effectively (for PhD students in Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences)
- Post-publication sharing: publishing your research effectively (For PhD students in Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences)
Booking / availability