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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Teaching open and reproducible scholarship: a critical review of the evidence base for current pedagogical methods and their outcomes.

Pownall, M., Azevedo, F., König, L.M., Slack, H.R., Evans, T.R., Flack, Z., Grinschgl, S., Elsherif, M.M., Gilligan-Lee, K.A., de Oliveira, C.M.F., Gjoneska, B., Kalandadze, T., Button, K., Ashcroft-Jones, S., Terry, J., Albayrak-Aydemir, N., Děchtěrenko, F., Alzahawi, S., Baker, B.J., Pittelkow, M.-M., Riedl, L., Schmidt, K., Pennington, C.R., Shaw, J.J., Lüke, T., Makel, M.C., Hartmann, H., Zaneva, M., Walker, D., Verheyen, S., Cox, D., Mattschey, J., Gallagher-Mitchell, T., Branney, Peter, Weisberg, Y., Izydorczak, K., Al-Hoorie, A.H., Creaven, A.-M., Stewart, S.L.K., Krautter, K., Matvienko-Sikar, K., Westwood, S.J., Arriaga, P., Liu, M., Baum, M.A., Wingen, T., Ross, R.M., O'Mahony, A., Bochynska, A., Jamieson, M., Tromp, M.V., Yeung, S.K., Vasilev, M.R., Gourdon-Kanhukamwe, A., Micheli, L., Konkol, M., Moreau, D., Bartlett, J.E., Clark, K., Brekelmans, G., Gkinopoulos, T., Tyler, S.L., Röer, J.P., Ilchovska, Z.G., Madan, C.R., Robertson, O., Iley, B.J., Guay, S., Sladekova, M., Sadhwani, S. 12 July 2023 (has links)
Yes / In recent years, the scientific community has called for improvements in the credibility, robustness and reproducibility of research, characterized by increased interest and promotion of open and transparent research practices. While progress has been positive, there is a lack of consideration about how this approach can be embedded into undergraduate and postgraduate research training. Specifically, a critical overview of the literature which investigates how integrating open and reproducible science may influence student outcomes is needed. In this paper, we provide the first critical review of literature surrounding the integration of open and reproducible scholarship into teaching and learning and its associated outcomes in students. Our review highlighted how embedding open and reproducible scholarship appears to be associated with (i) students' scientific literacies (i.e. students' understanding of open research, consumption of science and the development of transferable skills); (ii) student engagement (i.e. motivation and engagement with learning, collaboration and engagement in open research) and (iii) students' attitudes towards science (i.e. trust in science and confidence in research findings). However, our review also identified a need for more robust and rigorous methods within pedagogical research, including more interventional and experimental evaluations of teaching practice. We discuss implications for teaching and learning scholarship. / UKRI/ESRC rapid call grant, ealth Research Board Applying Researchinto Policy and Practice Fellowship, John Templeton Foundation (grant ID: 62631), Northern Ireland Department for the Economy Research Studentship
2

Opening up scholarship in the humanities: digital publishing, knowledge translation, and public engagement

Arbuckle, Alyssa 07 June 2021 (has links)
Opening Up Scholarship in the Humanities: Digital Publishing, Knowledge Translation, and Public Engagement considers the concept of humanistic, open, social scholarship and argues for its value in the contemporary academy as both a set of socially oriented activities and an organizing framework for such activities. This endeavour spans the interrelated areas of knowledge creation, public engagement, and open access, and demonstrates the importance of considering this triad as critical for the pursuit of academic work moving forward—especially in the humanities. Under the umbrella of open social scholarship, I consider open access as a baseline for public engagement and argue for the vitalness of this sort of work. Moreover, I suggest that there is a strong connection between digital scholarship and social knowledge creation. I explore the knowledge translation lessons that other fields might have for the humanities and include a journalist–humanist case study to this end. I also argue for the value of producing research output in many different forms and formats. Finally, I propose that there are benefits to explicitly popularizing the humanities. In sum, this dissertation speculates on past, current, and future scholarly communication activities, and proposes that such activities might be opened up for wider engagement and, thus, social benefit. / Graduate

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