Sharing a Trove List as a CollectionBuilder exhibition
You’ve been collecting and annotating items relating to your research project in a Trove List. You’d like to display the contents of your list as an online exhibition for others to explore. CollectionBuilder creates online exhibitions using static web...
Keywords: Trove, Trove List, CollectionBuilder, collection, GLAM Workbench, exhibition, HASS
Resource type: tutorial
Sharing a Trove List as a CollectionBuilder exhibition
https://tdg.glam-workbench.net/pathways/collections/collectionbuilder.html
https://dresa.org.au/materials/sharing-a-trove-list-as-a-collectionbuilder-exhibition
You’ve been collecting and annotating items relating to your research project in a Trove List. You’d like to display the contents of your list as an online exhibition for others to explore. [CollectionBuilder](https://collectionbuilder.github.io/) creates online exhibitions using static web technologies. But how do you get your List data from Trove into CollectionBuilder?
This tutorial from the Trove Data Guide walks through the complete process step-by-step.
Tim Sherratt (tim@timsherratt.au)
Tim Sherratt
ARDC Community Data Lab
Trove, Trove List, CollectionBuilder, collection, GLAM Workbench, exhibition, HASS
Create a layer in the Gazetteer of Historical Australian Placenames using metadata from Trove’s digitised maps
Trove includes thousands of digitised maps, created and published across the last few centuries. You want to create a collection of maps relating to your area of interest and explore it using the Gazetteer of Historical Australian Placenames (GHAP). You know it’s possible to add layers to GHAP,...
Keywords: Trove, maps, Gazetteer of Historical Australian Placenames (GHAP), GLAM Workbench, geospatial, HASS
Resource type: tutorial
Create a layer in the Gazetteer of Historical Australian Placenames using metadata from Trove’s digitised maps
https://tdg.glam-workbench.net/pathways/geospatial/maps-to-ghap.html
https://dresa.org.au/materials/create-a-layer-in-the-gazetteer-of-historical-australian-placenames-using-metadata-from-trove-s-digitised-maps
Trove includes thousands of digitised maps, created and published across the last few centuries. You want to create a collection of maps relating to your area of interest and explore it using the Gazetteer of Historical Australian Placenames (GHAP). You know it’s possible to add layers to GHAP, but how do you get the data from Trove in a format that can be uploaded as a layer?
This tutorial from the Trove Data Guide walks through the complete process step-by-step.
Tim Sherratt (tim@timsherratt.au)
Tim Sherratt
ARDC Community Data Lab
Trove, maps, Gazetteer of Historical Australian Placenames (GHAP), GLAM Workbench, geospatial, HASS
Comparing manuscript collections from Trove in Mirador
You want to compare the contents of two digitised manuscript collections and examine individual documents side-by-side. The Mirador viewer can be configured as a flexible, research workspace that displays multiple images from different sources, but how do you get...
Keywords: Trove, images, manuscripts, GLAM Workbench, IIIF, HASS, Mirador
Resource type: tutorial
Comparing manuscript collections from Trove in Mirador
https://tdg.glam-workbench.net/pathways/images/mirador.html
https://dresa.org.au/materials/comparing-manuscript-collections-in-mirador
You want to compare the contents of two digitised manuscript collections and examine individual documents side-by-side. The [Mirador viewer](https://projectmirador.org/) can be configured as a flexible, research workspace that displays multiple images from different sources, but how do you get manuscript collections from Trove to Mirador?
This tutorial from the Trove Data Guide walks through the complete process step-by-step.
Tim Sherratt (tim@timsherratt.au)
Tim Sherratt
ARDC Community Data Lab
Trove, images, manuscripts, GLAM Workbench, IIIF, HASS, Mirador
Working with a Trove collection in Tropy
You want to be able to work on a collection of digitised images from Trove on your desktop – adding notes, transcriptions, and annotations. Tropy is a useful tool for managing collections of research images, but how do you import a collection of images from Trove into...
Keywords: Trove, images, Tropy, IIIF, GLAM Workbench, HASS
Resource type: tutorial
Working with a Trove collection in Tropy
https://tdg.glam-workbench.net/pathways/images/tropy.html
https://dresa.org.au/materials/working-with-a-trove-collection-in-tropy
You want to be able to work on a collection of digitised images from Trove on your desktop – adding notes, transcriptions, and annotations. [Tropy](https://tropy.org/) is a useful tool for managing collections of research images, but how do you import a collection of images from Trove into Tropy?
This tutorial from the [Trove Data Guide](https://tdg.glam-workbench.net/home.html) walks through the complete process step-by-step.
Tim Sherratt (tim@timsherratt.au)
Tim Sherratt
ARDC Community Data Lab
Trove, images, Tropy, IIIF, GLAM Workbench, HASS
Analysing keywords in Trove’s digitised newspapers
You want to explore differences in language use across a collection of digitised newspaper articles. The Australian Text Analytics Platform provides a Keywords Analysis tool that helps you...
Keywords: text analysis, Australian Text Analytics Platform (ATAP), Trove, GLAM Workbench, Trove Newspaper and Gazette Harvester, newspapers, HASS
Resource type: tutorial
Analysing keywords in Trove’s digitised newspapers
https://tdg.glam-workbench.net/pathways/text/newspapers-keywords.html
https://dresa.org.au/materials/analysing-keywords-in-trove-s-digitised-newspapers
You want to explore differences in language use across a collection of digitised newspaper articles. The [Australian Text Analytics Platform](https://www.atap.edu.au/) provides a [Keywords Analysis tool](https://github.com/Australian-Text-Analytics-Platform/keywords-analysis) that helps you examine whether particular words are over or under-represented across collections of text. But how do get data from Trove’s newspapers to the keyword analysis tool?
This tutorial from the [Trove Data Guide](https://tdg.glam-workbench.net/home.html) walks through the complete process step-by-step.
Tim Sherratt (tim@timsherratt.au)
Tim Sherratt
ARDC Community Data Lab
text analysis, Australian Text Analytics Platform (ATAP), Trove, GLAM Workbench, Trove Newspaper and Gazette Harvester, newspapers, HASS
Introduction to REDCap at Griffith University
This site is designed as a companion to Griffith Library’s Research Data Capture workshops. It can also be treated as a standalone, self-paced tutorial for learning to use REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture) a secure web application for building and managing online surveys and databases.
Keywords: REDCap, survey instruments
Resource type: tutorial
Introduction to REDCap at Griffith University
https://griffithunilibrary.github.io/redcap-intro/
https://dresa.org.au/materials/introduction-to-redcap-at-griffith-university
This site is designed as a companion to Griffith Library’s Research Data Capture workshops. It can also be treated as a standalone, self-paced tutorial for learning to use REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture) a secure web application for building and managing online surveys and databases.
y.banens@griffith.edu.au
Yuri Banens
REDCap, survey instruments
mbr
phd
ecr
researcher
support
Introducing Computational Thinking
This workshop is for researchers at all career stages who want to understand the uses and the building blocks of computational thinking. This skill is useful for all kinds of problem solving, whether in real life or in computing.
The workshop will not teach computer programming per se. Instead...
Keywords: computational skills, data skills
Resource type: tutorial
Introducing Computational Thinking
https://griffithunilibrary.github.io/intro-computational-thinking/
https://dresa.org.au/materials/introducing-computational-thinking
This workshop is for researchers at all career stages who want to understand the uses and the building blocks of computational thinking. This skill is useful for all kinds of problem solving, whether in real life or in computing.
The workshop will not teach computer programming per se. Instead it will cover the thought processes involved should you want to learn to program.
s.stapleton@griffith.edu.au
Belinda Weaver
computational skills, data skills
Advanced Data Wrangling with OpenRefine
This online self-paced workshop teaches advanced data wrangling skills including combining datasets, geolocating data, and “what if” exploration using OpenRefine.
Keywords: data skills, data
Resource type: tutorial
Advanced Data Wrangling with OpenRefine
https://griffithunilibrary.github.io/advanced-data-wrangle-2/
https://dresa.org.au/materials/advanced-data-wrangling-with-openrefine
This online self-paced workshop teaches advanced data wrangling skills including combining datasets, geolocating data, and “what if” exploration using OpenRefine.
s.stapleton@griffith.edu.au
Sharron Stapleton
data skills, data
mbr
phd
ecr
researcher
support
professional
Introduction to Data Cleaning with OpenRefine
Learn basic data cleaning techniques in this self-paced online workshop using open data from data.qld.gov.au and open source tool OpenRefine openrefine.org. Learn techniques to prepare messy tabular data for comupational analysis. Of most relevance to HASS disciplines, working with textual data...
Keywords: data skills, Data analysis
Resource type: tutorial
Introduction to Data Cleaning with OpenRefine
https://griffithunilibrary.github.io/data-cleaning-intro/
https://dresa.org.au/materials/introduction-to-data-cleaning-with-openrefine
Learn basic data cleaning techniques in this self-paced online workshop using open data from data.qld.gov.au and open source tool OpenRefine openrefine.org. Learn techniques to prepare messy tabular data for comupational analysis. Of most relevance to HASS disciplines, working with textual data in a structured or semi-structured format.
s.stapleton@griffith.edu.au;
Sharron Stapleton
data skills, Data analysis
mbr
phd
ecr
researcher
support
professional
10 Reproducible Research things - Building Business Continuity
The idea that you can duplicate an experiment and get the same conclusion is the basis for all scientific discoveries. Reproducible research is data analysis that starts with the raw data and offers a transparent workflow to arrive at the same results and conclusions. However not all studies are...
Keywords: reproducibility, data management
Resource type: tutorial, video
10 Reproducible Research things - Building Business Continuity
https://guereslib.github.io/ten-reproducible-research-things/
https://dresa.org.au/materials/9-reproducible-research-things-building-business-continuity
The idea that you can duplicate an experiment and get the same conclusion is the basis for all scientific discoveries. Reproducible research is data analysis that starts with the raw data and offers a transparent workflow to arrive at the same results and conclusions. However not all studies are replicable due to lack of information on the process. Therefore, reproducibility in research is extremely important.
Researchers genuinely want to make their research more reproducible, but sometimes don’t know where to start and often don’t have the available time to investigate or establish methods on how reproducible research can speed up every day work. We aim for the philosophy “Be better than you were yesterday”. Reproducibility is a process, and we highlight there is no expectation to go from beginner to expert in a single workshop. Instead, we offer some steps you can take towards the reproducibility path following our Steps to Reproducible Research self paced program.
Video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bANTr9RvnGg
Tutorial:
https://guereslib.github.io/ten-reproducible-research-things/
a.miotto@griffith.edu.au; s.stapleton@griffith.edu.au; i.jennings@griffith.edu.au;
Amanda Miotto
Julie Toohey
Sharron Stapleton
Isaac Jennings
reproducibility, data management
masters
phd
ecr
researcher
support
Data Storytelling
Nowadays, more information created than our audience could possibly analyse on their own! A study by Stanford professor Chip Heath found that during the recall of speeches, 63% of people remember stories and how they made them feel, but only 5% remember a single statistic. So, you should convert...
Keywords: data storytelling, data visualisation
Data Storytelling
https://griffithunilibrary.github.io/data-storytelling/
https://dresa.org.au/materials/data-storytelling
Nowadays, more information created than our audience could possibly analyse on their own! A study by Stanford professor Chip Heath found that during the recall of speeches, 63% of people remember stories and how they made them feel, but only 5% remember a single statistic. So, you should convert your insights and discovery from data into stories to share with non-experts with a language they understand. But how?
This tutorial helps you construct stories that incite an emotional response and create meaning and understanding for the audience by applying data storytelling techniques.
m.yamaguchi@griffith.edu.au
a.miotto@griffith.edu.au
Masami Yamaguchi
Amanda Miotto
Brett Parker
data storytelling, data visualisation
support
masters
phd
researcher