Category community

Why we discuss 'ally skills' in open science

By Yo Yehudi (Wellcome Trust), Malvika Sharan (The Alan Turing Institute) and Emmy Tsang (TU Delft).

Nudging towards a better default for open source project ownership

By Malvika Sharan, Andrew Brown, Warrick Ball and Ben Krikler.

10 arguments against Open Science that you can win

This post was originally written for the SSI’s 10 years blog series. More blogs from me on SSI page can be seen here

Challenges in Assessing Contributions to Reproducible Research and Open Science

This talk was given in a panel organised by Declaration of Research Assessment (DORA): Addressing Roadblocks in Research Assessment Reform. Slides are available on Zenodo and can be cited as...

Bootstrapping an Open Source development team during the pandemic

Malvika Sharan, Yo Yehudi, Raniere Silva, Colin Sauze, Claire Wyatt (authors’ names are arranged in no particular order)

How to be a pessimistic organiser for successful events?

This post was originally written for the Software Sustainability Institute’s blog series. More blogs from me on SSI page can be seen here

5 tips to promote ‘water cooler effects’ at informal discussion sessions

Written as a part of her participation at Bioinformatics Open Source Conference 2019 supported by the Open Bionformatics Foundation (OBF) sponsors a Travel Fellowship program fellowship, this post first appeared...

A Friendly Letter to Community Managers

I gave a 2-min lightning talk on "Why being 'less-specialised' is an important skill for the #Community #managers" at #ccmcr2019 at @SoftwareSaved. Since many of you related to my monologue,...

Code of Conduct Facilitators - Everything you need to know.

Originally drafted on 30 May 2019 for The Carpentries Code of Conduct (CoC), in this document, I explore the role of a “CoC contact person” at online or in-person community...

Digital Storytelling for Culture Change in Community

“Stories matter. Many stories matter. Stories have been used to dispossess and to malign, but stories can also be used to empower and to humanize. Stories can break the dignity...

Does every biased action have an effective reaction?

This posts summarises the article, Does every biased action have an effective reaction? - cite as: Sharan, M. (2019). Does Every Biased Action Have An Effective Reaction? Zenodo. doi: 10.5281/zenodo.7027580...

Inclusiveness in Open Science

Inclusiveness in Open Science

Finding your niche in science

From developing software to building community in bioinformatics

Category speakerdeck

Bootstrapping an Open Source development team during the pandemic

Malvika Sharan, Yo Yehudi, Raniere Silva, Colin Sauze, Claire Wyatt (authors’ names are arranged in no particular order)

Inclusiveness in Open Science

Inclusiveness in Open Science

Finding your niche in science

From developing software to building community in bioinformatics

Category open-practices

Why we discuss 'ally skills' in open science

By Yo Yehudi (Wellcome Trust), Malvika Sharan (The Alan Turing Institute) and Emmy Tsang (TU Delft).

Nudging towards a better default for open source project ownership

By Malvika Sharan, Andrew Brown, Warrick Ball and Ben Krikler.

10 arguments against Open Science that you can win

This post was originally written for the SSI’s 10 years blog series. More blogs from me on SSI page can be seen here

Challenges in Assessing Contributions to Reproducible Research and Open Science

This talk was given in a panel organised by Declaration of Research Assessment (DORA): Addressing Roadblocks in Research Assessment Reform. Slides are available on Zenodo and can be cited as...

How to be a pessimistic organiser for successful events?

This post was originally written for the Software Sustainability Institute’s blog series. More blogs from me on SSI page can be seen here

5 tips to promote ‘water cooler effects’ at informal discussion sessions

Written as a part of her participation at Bioinformatics Open Source Conference 2019 supported by the Open Bionformatics Foundation (OBF) sponsors a Travel Fellowship program fellowship, this post first appeared...

A Friendly Letter to Community Managers

I gave a 2-min lightning talk on "Why being 'less-specialised' is an important skill for the #Community #managers" at #ccmcr2019 at @SoftwareSaved. Since many of you related to my monologue,...

Code of Conduct Facilitators - Everything you need to know.

Originally drafted on 30 May 2019 for The Carpentries Code of Conduct (CoC), in this document, I explore the role of a “CoC contact person” at online or in-person community...

Digital Storytelling for Culture Change in Community

“Stories matter. Many stories matter. Stories have been used to dispossess and to malign, but stories can also be used to empower and to humanize. Stories can break the dignity...

Inclusiveness in Open Science

Inclusiveness in Open Science

Category article

Does every biased action have an effective reaction?

This posts summarises the article, Does every biased action have an effective reaction? - cite as: Sharan, M. (2019). Does Every Biased Action Have An Effective Reaction? Zenodo. doi: 10.5281/zenodo.7027580...

Category women-in-science

Does every biased action have an effective reaction?

This posts summarises the article, Does every biased action have an effective reaction? - cite as: Sharan, M. (2019). Does Every Biased Action Have An Effective Reaction? Zenodo. doi: 10.5281/zenodo.7027580...

Category code-of-conduct

Code of Conduct Facilitators - Everything you need to know.

Originally drafted on 30 May 2019 for The Carpentries Code of Conduct (CoC), in this document, I explore the role of a “CoC contact person” at online or in-person community...

Does every biased action have an effective reaction?

This posts summarises the article, Does every biased action have an effective reaction? - cite as: Sharan, M. (2019). Does Every Biased Action Have An Effective Reaction? Zenodo. doi: 10.5281/zenodo.7027580...

Category OpenSource

Bootstrapping an Open Source development team during the pandemic

Malvika Sharan, Yo Yehudi, Raniere Silva, Colin Sauze, Claire Wyatt (authors’ names are arranged in no particular order)

Category research-assessment

Challenges in Assessing Contributions to Reproducible Research and Open Science

This talk was given in a panel organised by Declaration of Research Assessment (DORA): Addressing Roadblocks in Research Assessment Reform. Slides are available on Zenodo and can be cited as...

Category inclusion

Why we discuss 'ally skills' in open science

By Yo Yehudi (Wellcome Trust), Malvika Sharan (The Alan Turing Institute) and Emmy Tsang (TU Delft).

Category notice-board