Cleaning Biodiversity Data in R
This book is a practical guide for cleaning geo-referenced biodiversity data using R. It focuses specifically on the processes and challenges you’ll face with biodiversity data. As such, this book isn’t a general guide to data cleaning but a targeted resource for those working with or interested...
Keywords: R, Data cleaning, Biodiversity data, Rstats, Ecology, Reproducibility, Beginner R coding, data wrangling, Coding
Cleaning Biodiversity Data in R
https://cleaning-data-r.ala.org.au/
https://dresa.org.au/materials/cleaning-biodiversity-data-in-r
This book is a practical guide for cleaning geo-referenced biodiversity data using R. It focuses specifically on the processes and challenges you’ll face with biodiversity data. As such, this book isn’t a general guide to data cleaning but a targeted resource for those working with or interested in ecology, evolution, and geo-referenced biodiversity data.
Atlas of Living Australia support@ala.org.au
Atlas of Living Australia
R, Data cleaning, Biodiversity data, Rstats, Ecology, Reproducibility, Beginner R coding, data wrangling, Coding
ALA Labs
ALA Labs provides resources and articles from the Atlas of Living Australia's Science and Decision Support team. On the website, you can find:
- Posts: Code, articles, analyses and visualisations that will hopefully help you in your own work
- Research: Highlighted summaries of scientific...
Keywords: Ecology, R, Python, Rstats, Biodiversity data, Open science, Reproducibility, Coding, Data cleaning, Data visualisation, Species Distribution Modelling, Beginner R coding
ALA Labs
https://labs.ala.org.au/
https://dresa.org.au/materials/ala-labs
ALA Labs provides resources and articles from the Atlas of Living Australia's Science and Decision Support team. On the website, you can find:
- Posts: Code, articles, analyses and visualisations that will hopefully help you in your own work
- Research: Highlighted summaries of scientific research that has used data from the Atlas of Living Australia
- Software: R & Python packages that the Science & Decision Support team manage
- Books: Long-form resources with best-practice data wrangling and visualisation
- Gallery: Showcasing external work that uses tools from ALA Labs
Atlas of Living Australia support@ala.org.au
Ecology, R, Python, Rstats, Biodiversity data, Open science, Reproducibility, Coding, Data cleaning, Data visualisation, Species Distribution Modelling, Beginner R coding
Astronomy Data And Computing Services - Upskilling the Australian astronomy community
The Astronomy Data And Computing Services (ADACS) initiative has been working with the Australian astronomy community for just over 3 years now. Our vision is to deliver astronomy-focused training, support and expertise to maximise the scientific return on investments in astronomical data &...
Keywords: astronomy, data skills, eresearch skills, skills, computational skills, training, skills gaps, astronomy-focused training, training material
Astronomy Data And Computing Services - Upskilling the Australian astronomy community
https://zenodo.org/records/4287748
https://dresa.org.au/materials/astronomy-data-and-computing-services-upskilling-the-australian-astronomy-community-57afa0b9-77da-4dc1-ad29-25089f19363d
The Astronomy Data And Computing Services (ADACS) initiative has been working with the Australian astronomy community for just over 3 years now. Our vision is to deliver astronomy-focused training, support and expertise to maximise the scientific return on investments in astronomical data & computing infrastructure.
During these last 3 years, we have delivered dozens of face-to-face, hands-on workshops and created several hours worth of online tutorial materials. This talk will focus on our journey to deliver this computational skills training to the community, exploring how we chose different delivery pathways and content, based both on community input as well as our professional expertise and understanding of existing skill gaps. Most importantly we will discuss our plans for the future and how we are working on actively including the community in developing new training material beyond the usual skills survey.
Come along to this talk if you would like to hear about a national effort to deliver computational skills training and would like to know more about potential new avenues to provide just-in-time training and how to collaborate with ADACS.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Lange, Rebecca (orcid: 0000-0002-9449-4384)
astronomy, data skills, eresearch skills, skills, computational skills, training, skills gaps, astronomy-focused training, training material
Successful data training stories from NCI
NCI Australia manages a multi-petabyte sized data repository, collocated with its HPC systems and data services, which allows high performance access to many scientific research datasets across many earth science domains.
An important aspect is to provide training materials that proactively...
Keywords: skills, training, eresearch skills, HPC training, domain-specific training, reproducible workflows, training material
Successful data training stories from NCI
https://zenodo.org/records/4287750
https://dresa.org.au/materials/successful-data-training-stories-from-nci-33f110e3-0c06-492e-9cc5-fa0f886ca1b8
NCI Australia manages a multi-petabyte sized data repository, collocated with its HPC systems and data services, which allows high performance access to many scientific research datasets across many earth science domains.
An important aspect is to provide training materials that proactively engages with the research community to improve their understanding of the data available, and to share knowledge and best practices in the use of tools and other software. We have developed multiple levels of training modules (introductory, intermediate and advanced) to cater for users with different levels of experience and interest. We have also tailored courses for each scientific domain, so that the use-cases and software will be most relevant to their interests and needs.
For our training, we combine brief lectures followed by hands-on training examples on how to use datasets, using working examples of well-known tools and software that people can use as a template and modify to fit their needs. For example, we take representative use-cases from some scientific activities, from our collaborations and from user support issues, and convert to Jupyter notebook examples so that people can repeat the workfIow and reproduce the results. We also use the training as an opportunity to raise awareness of growing issues in resource management. Some examples include a familiarity of the FAIR data principles, licensing, citation, data management and trusted digital repositories. This approach to both our online training materials and workshops has been well-received by PhD students, early careers, and cross disciplinary users.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Wang, Jingbo
skills, training, eresearch skills, HPC training, domain-specific training, reproducible workflows, training material
Accelerating skills development in Data science and AI at scale
At the Monash Data Science and AI platform, we believe that upskilling our research community and building a workforce with data science skills are key to accelerating the application of data science in research. To achieve this, we create and leverage new and existing training capabilities...
Keywords: AI, machine learning, eresearch skills, training, train the trainer, volunteer instructors, training partnerships, training material
Accelerating skills development in Data science and AI at scale
https://zenodo.org/records/4287746
https://dresa.org.au/materials/accelerating-skills-development-in-data-science-and-ai-at-scale-2d8a65fa-f96e-44ad-a026-cfae3f38d128
At the Monash Data Science and AI platform, we believe that upskilling our research community and building a workforce with data science skills are key to accelerating the application of data science in research. To achieve this, we create and leverage new and existing training capabilities within and outside Monash University. In this talk, we will discuss the principles and purpose of establishing collaborative models to accelerate skills development at scale. We will talk about our approach to identifying gaps in the existing skills and training available in data science, key areas of interest as identified by the research community and various sources of training available in the marketplace. We will provide insights into the collaborations we currently have and intend to develop in the future within the university and also nationally.
The talk will also cover our approach as outlined below
• Combined survey of gaps in skills and trainings for Data science and AI
• Provide seats to partners
• Share associate instructors/helpers/volunteers
• Develop combined training materials
• Publish a repository of open source trainings
• Train the trainer activities
• Establish a network of volunteers to deliver trainings at their local regions
Industry plays a significant role in making some invaluable training available to the research community either through self learning platforms like AWS Machine Learning University or Instructor led courses like NVIDIA Deep Learning Institute. We will discuss how we leverage our partnerships with Industry to bring these trainings to our research community.
Finally, we will discuss how we map our training to the ARDC skills roadmap and how the ARDC platforms project “Environments to accelerate Machine Learning based Discovery” has enabled collaboration between Monash University and University of Queensland to develop and deliver training together.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Tang, Titus
AI, machine learning, eresearch skills, training, train the trainer, volunteer instructors, training partnerships, training material
Data Fluency: a community of practice supporting a digitally skilled workforce
This presentation showcases the impact of the Monash Data Fluency Community of Practice upon digitally skilled Graduate Research students involved as learners and instructors in the program. The strong focus on building community to complement training, has fostered an environment of learning,...
Keywords: skills, training, eresearch skills, data skills, online learning, pedagogy, train the trainer, digitally skilled workforce, training material
Data Fluency: a community of practice supporting a digitally skilled workforce
https://zenodo.org/records/4287752
https://dresa.org.au/materials/data-fluency-a-community-of-practice-supporting-a-digitally-skilled-workforce-b911a1a8-0331-496e-95a6-0015a12acc34
This presentation showcases the impact of the Monash Data Fluency Community of Practice upon digitally skilled Graduate Research students involved as learners and instructors in the program. The strong focus on building community to complement training, has fostered an environment of learning, networking and sharing of expertise. Hear what the Graduate research students have to say about the value of skills training and how it has impacted their research; how the community has enabled them to network with a broad range of researchers and affiliate partner groups they would not ordinarily be in contact with; how their research journey has been enhanced by working as part of a multi-disciplinary team, as well as sharpening their teaching skills.
The rapid refocus from face - face to online delivery, as a result of the pandemic, highlights the importance of the multi-faceted online approach including workshops, drop-in sessions, SLACK chat and online learning resources. As a result of the shift to online, the range of strategic external partner/affiliate groups has extended and demand for workshops and drop-ins has increased. Learn how the instructors have altered their pedagogical approach to engage workshop and drop-in participants; how they have overcome some of the challenges of facilitating in an online environment; and how this is preparing them to become part of a digitally skilled workforce.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Groenewegen, David (orcid: 0000-0003-2523-1676)
skills, training, eresearch skills, data skills, online learning, pedagogy, train the trainer, digitally skilled workforce, training material
ARDC Skills Landscape
The Australian Research Data Commons is driving transformational change in the research data ecosystem, enabling researchers to conduct world class data-intensive research. One interconnected component of this ecosystem is skills development/uplift, which is critical to the Commons and its...
Keywords: skills, data skills, eresearch skills, community, skilled workforce, FAIR, research data management, data stewardship, data governance, data use, data generation, training material
ARDC Skills Landscape
https://zenodo.org/records/4287743
https://dresa.org.au/materials/ardc-skills-landscape-56b224ca-9e30-4771-8615-d028c7be86a6
The Australian Research Data Commons is driving transformational change in the research data ecosystem, enabling researchers to conduct world class data-intensive research. One interconnected component of this ecosystem is skills development/uplift, which is critical to the Commons and its purpose of providing Australian researchers with a competitive advantage through data.
In this presentation, Kathryn Unsworth introduces the ARDC Skills Landscape. The Landscape is a first step in developing a national skills framework to enable a coordinated and cohesive approach to skills development across the Australian eResearch sector. It is also a first step towards helping to analyse current approaches in data training to identify:
- Siloed skills initiatives, and finding ways to build partnerships and improve collaboration
- Skills deficits, and working to address the gaps in data skills
- Areas of skills development for investment by skills stakeholders like universities, research organisations, skills and training service providers, ARDC, etc.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Unsworth, Kathryn (orcid: 0000-0002-5407-9987)
skills, data skills, eresearch skills, community, skilled workforce, FAIR, research data management, data stewardship, data governance, data use, data generation, training material
Programming and tidy data analysis in R
A workshop to expand the skill-set of someone who has basic familiarity with R. Covers programming constructs such as functions and for-loops, and working with data frames using the dplyr and tidyr packages. Explains the importance of a "tidy" data representation, and goes through common steps...
Keywords: R, Tidyverse, Programming
Resource type: tutorial
Programming and tidy data analysis in R
https://monashdatafluency.github.io/r-progtidy/
https://dresa.org.au/materials/programming-and-tidy-data-analysis-in-r
A workshop to expand the skill-set of someone who has basic familiarity with R. Covers programming constructs such as functions and for-loops, and working with data frames using the dplyr and tidyr packages. Explains the importance of a "tidy" data representation, and goes through common steps needed to load data and convert it into a tidy form.
To be taught as a hands on workshop, typically as two half-days.
Developed by the Monash Bioinformatics Platform and taught as part of the Data Fluency program at Monash University. License is CC-BY-4. You are free to share and adapt the material so long as attribution is given.
Paul Harrison paul.harrison@monash.edu
Paul Harrison
Richard Beare
R, Tidyverse, Programming
phd
ecr
researcher
Introduction to R
An introduction to R, for people with zero coding experience.
To be taught as a hands on workshop, typically as two half-days.
Developed by the Monash Bioinformatics Platform and taught as part of the Data Fluency program at Monash University. License is CC-BY-4. You are free to share and...
Keywords: R
Resource type: tutorial
Introduction to R
https://monashdatafluency.github.io/r-intro-2/
https://dresa.org.au/materials/introduction-to-r
An introduction to R, for people with zero coding experience.
To be taught as a hands on workshop, typically as two half-days.
Developed by the Monash Bioinformatics Platform and taught as part of the Data Fluency program at Monash University. License is CC-BY-4. You are free to share and adapt the material so long as attribution is given.
Paul Harrison paul.harrison@monash.edu
Paul Harrison
R
phd
ecr
researcher
Introduction to Jupyter Notebooks
This workshop will introduce you to Jupyter Notebooks, a digital tool that has exploded in popularity in recent years for those working with data.
You will learn what they are, what they do and why you might like to use them. It is an introductory set of lessons for those who are brand new,...
Keywords: jupyter, Introductory, training material, CloudStor, markdown, Python, R
Resource type: tutorial
Introduction to Jupyter Notebooks
https://zenodo.org/record/6859121
https://dresa.org.au/materials/introduction-to-jupyter-notebooks
This workshop will introduce you to Jupyter Notebooks, a digital tool that has exploded in popularity in recent years for those working with data.
You will learn what they are, what they do and why you might like to use them. It is an introductory set of lessons for those who are brand new, have little or no knowledge of coding and computational methods in research.
This workshop is targeted at those who are absolute beginners or ‘tech-curious’. It includes a hands-on component, using basic programming commands, but requires no previous knowledge of programming.
sara.king@aarnet.edu.au
Sara King
Mason, Ingrid
jupyter, Introductory, training material, CloudStor, markdown, Python, R
Introduction to Machine Learning using R: SVM & Unsupervised Learning
Machine Learning (ML) is a new way to program computers to solve real world problems. It has gained popularity over the last few years by achieving tremendous success in tasks that we believed only humans could solve, from recognising images to self-driving cars. In this course, we will explore...
Introduction to Machine Learning using R: SVM & Unsupervised Learning
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/r207
https://dresa.org.au/materials/introduction-to-machine-learning-using-r-svm-unsupervised-learning
Machine Learning (ML) is a new way to program computers to solve real world problems. It has gained popularity over the last few years by achieving tremendous success in tasks that we believed only humans could solve, from recognising images to self-driving cars. In this course, we will explore the fundamentals of Machine Learning from a practical perspective with the help of the R programming language and its scientific computing packages.
Comprehensive introduction to Machine Learning models and techniques such as Support Vector Machine, K-Nearest Neighbor and Dimensionality Reduction.
Know the differences between various core Machine Learning models.
Understand the Machine Learning modelling workflows.
Use R and its relevant packages to process real datasets, train and apply Machine Learning models.
\\Either \Learn to Program: R\ and \Data Manipulation in R\ or \Learn to Program: R\ and \Data Manipulation and Visualisation in R\needed to attend this course. If you already have experience with programming, please check the topics covered in the courses above and \Introduction to ML using R: Introduction & Linear Regression\ to ensure that you are familiar with the knowledge needed for this course, such as good understanding of R syntax and basic programming concepts, familiarity with dplyr, tidyr and ggplot2 packages, and basic understanding of Machine Learning and Model Training.\\Maths knowledge is not required. There are only a few Math formula that you are going to see in this course, however references to Mathematics required for learning about Machine Learning will be provided. Having an understanding of the Mathematics behind each Machine Learning algorithms is going to make you appreciate the behaviour of the model and know its pros/cons when using them.\\
training@intersect.org.au
Intersect Australia
R
Introduction to Machine Learning using R: Introduction & Linear Regression
Machine Learning (ML) is a new way to program computers to solve real world problems. It has gained popularity over the last few years by achieving tremendous success in tasks that we believed only humans could solve, from recognising images to self-driving cars. In this course, we will explore...
Introduction to Machine Learning using R: Introduction & Linear Regression
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/r205
https://dresa.org.au/materials/introduction-to-machine-learning-using-r-introduction-linear-regression
Machine Learning (ML) is a new way to program computers to solve real world problems. It has gained popularity over the last few years by achieving tremendous success in tasks that we believed only humans could solve, from recognising images to self-driving cars. In this course, we will explore the fundamentals of Machine Learning from a practical perspective with the help of the R programming language and its scientific computing packages.
Understand the difference between supervised and unsupervised Machine Learning.
Understand the fundamentals of Machine Learning.
Comprehensive introduction to Machine Learning models and techniques such as Linear Regression and Model Training.
Understand the Machine Learning modelling workflows.
Use R and and its relevant packages to process real datasets, train and apply Machine Learning models
\\Either \Learn to Program: R\ and \Data Manipulation in R\ or \Learn to Program: R\ and \Data Manipulation and Visualisation in R\needed to attend this course. If you already have experience with programming, please check the topics covered in courses above to ensure that you are familiar with the knowledge needed for this course, such as good understanding of R syntax and basic programming concepts and familiarity with dplyr, tidyr and ggplot2 packages.\\Maths knowledge is not required. There are only a few Math formula that you are going to see in this course, however references to Mathematics required for learning about Machine Learning will be provided. Having an understanding of the Mathematics behind each Machine Learning algorithms is going to make you appreciate the behaviour of the model and know its pros/cons when using them.\\
training@intersect.org.au
Intersect Australia
R
Exploring ANOVAs in R
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio and the Shiny web application framework.This half-day course covers one and two-way Analyses of Variance (ANOVA) and their...
Exploring ANOVAs in R
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/r212
https://dresa.org.au/materials/exploring-anovas-in-r
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio and the Shiny web application framework.This half-day course covers one and two-way Analyses of Variance (ANOVA) and their non-parametric counterparts in R.
ANOVA (Analysis of Variance) is a statistical method used to determine whether there are significant differences between the means of three or more groups. It helps analyse the effect of independent variables on a dependent variable by comparing the variance within groups to the variance between groups. ANOVA tests assume normality, homogeneity of variances, and independence of observations, and can be used to explore relationships in datasets, such as how factors like study time or parental education affect student performance.
- Basic statistical theory behind ANOVAs
- How to check that the data meets the assumptions
- One-way ANOVA in R and post-hoc analysis
- Two-way ANOVA plus interaction effects and post-hoc analysis
- Non-parametric alternatives to one and two-way ANOVA
This course assumes an intermediate level of programming proficiency, plus familiarity with the syntax and functions of the dplyr and ggplot2 packages. Experience navigating the RStudio integrated development environment (IDE) is also required.
If you’re new to programming in R, we strongly recommend you register for the \Learn to Program: R\, \Data Manipulation and Visualisation in R\ workshops first.
training@intersect.org.au
Intersect Australia
R
Data Manipulation and Visualisation in R
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio and the Shiny web application framework.
In this workshop, you will learn how to manipulate, explore and get insights...
Data Manipulation and Visualisation in R
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/r203
https://dresa.org.au/materials/data-manipulation-and-visualisation-in-r
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio and the Shiny web application framework.
In this workshop, you will learn how to manipulate, explore and get insights from your data (Data Manipulation using the dplyr package), as well as how to convert your data from one format to another (Data Transformation using the tidyr package). You will also explore different types of graphs and learn how to customise them using one of the most popular plotting packages in R, ggplot2 (Data Visualisation).
We teach using RStudio, which allows program code, results, visualisations and documentation to be blended seamlessly.
Join us for a live coding workshop where we write programs that produce results, using the researcher-focused training modules from Intersect and the highly regarded Software Carpentry Foundation.
DataFrame Manipulation using the dplyr package
DataFrame Transformation using the tidyr package
Using the Grammar of Graphics to convert data into figures using the ggplot2 package
Configuring plot elements within ggplot2
Exploring different types of plots using ggplot2
Either \Learn to Program: R\ or \Learn to Program: R\ and \R for Research\ needed to attend this course. If you already have experience with programming, please check the topics covered in the \Learn to Program: R\ and \R for Research\ courses to ensure that you are familiar with the knowledge needed for this course.
training@intersect.org.au
Intersect Australia
R
Traversing t tests in R
R has become a popular programming language for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio and the Shiny web application framework.
The primary goal of this workshop is to familiarise you with basic statistical concepts in R...
Traversing t tests in R
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/r211
https://dresa.org.au/materials/traversing-t-tests-in-r
R has become a popular programming language for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio and the Shiny web application framework.
The primary goal of this workshop is to familiarise you with basic statistical concepts in R from reading in and manipulating data, checking assumptions, statistical tests and visualisations. This is not an advanced statistics course, but is instead designed to gently introduce you to statistical comparisons and hypothesis testing in R.
Read in and manipulate data
Check assumptions of t tests
Perform one-sample t tests
Perform two-sample t tests (Independent-samples, Paired-samples)
Perform nonparametric t tests (One-sample Wilcoxon Signed Rank test, Independent-samples Mann-Whitney U test)
This course assumes familiarity with R and RStudio. You should have a good understanding of R syntax and basic programming concepts. Please consider attending Intersect’s following courses to get up to speed: \Learn to Program: R\, \Data Manipulation and Visualisation in R\
training@intersect.org.au
Intersect Australia
R
Introduction to Machine Learning using R: Classification
Machine Learning (ML) is a new way to program computers to solve real world problems. It has gained popularity over the last few years by achieving tremendous success in tasks that we believed only humans could solve, from recognising images to self-driving cars. In this course, we will explore...
Introduction to Machine Learning using R: Classification
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/r206
https://dresa.org.au/materials/introduction-to-machine-learning-using-r-classification
Machine Learning (ML) is a new way to program computers to solve real world problems. It has gained popularity over the last few years by achieving tremendous success in tasks that we believed only humans could solve, from recognising images to self-driving cars. In this course, we will explore the fundamentals of Machine Learning from a practical perspective with the help of the R programming language and its scientific computing packages.
Comprehensive introduction to Machine Learning models and techniques such as Logistic Regression, Decision Trees and Ensemble Learning.
Know the differences between various core Machine Learning models.
Understand the Machine Learning modelling workflows.
Use R and its relevant packages to process real datasets, train and apply Machine Learning models.
\\Either \Learn to Program: R\ and \Data Manipulation in R\ or \Learn to Program: R\ and \Data Manipulation and Visualisation in R\needed to attend this course. If you already have experience with programming, please check the topics covered in courses above and \Introduction to ML using R: Introduction & Linear Regression\ to ensure that you are familiar with the knowledge needed for this course, such as good understanding of R syntax and basic programming concepts, familiarity with dplyr, tidyr and ggplot2 packages, and basic understanding of Machine Learning and Model Training.\\Maths knowledge is not required. There are only a few Math formula that you are going to see in this course, however references to Mathematics required for learning about Machine Learning will be provided. Having an understanding of the Mathematics behind each Machine Learning algorithms is going to make you appreciate the behaviour of the model and know its pros/cons when using them.\\
training@intersect.org.au
Intersect Australia
R
Data Visualisation in R
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio and the Shiny web application framework.
In this workshop, you will explore different types of graphs and learn how to...
Data Visualisation in R
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/r202
https://dresa.org.au/materials/data-visualisation-in-r
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio and the Shiny web application framework.
In this workshop, you will explore different types of graphs and learn how to customise them using one of the most popular plotting packages in R, ggplot2 (Data Visualisation).
We teach using RStudio, which allows program code, results, visualisations and documentation to be blended seamlessly.
Join us for a live coding workshop where we write programs that produce results, using the researcher-focused training modules from Intersect and the highly regarded Software Carpentry Foundation.
Using the Grammar of Graphics to convert data into figures using the ggplot2 package
Configuring plot elements within ggplot2
Exploring different types of plots using ggplot2
Either \Learn to Program: R\ or \Learn to Program: R\ and \R for Research\ needed to attend this course. If you already have experience with programming, please check the topics covered in the \Learn to Program: R\ and \R for Research\ courses to ensure that you are familiar with the knowledge needed for this course.
We also strongly recommend attending the \Data Manipulation in R\ course.
training@intersect.org.au
Intersect Australia
R
Exploring Chi-square and correlation in R
This hands-on training is designed to familiarise you with the data analysis environment of the R programming. In this session, we will traverse into the realm of inferential statistics, beginning with correlation and reliability. We will present a brief conceptual overview and the R procedures...
Exploring Chi-square and correlation in R
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/r210
https://dresa.org.au/materials/exploring-chi-square-and-correlation-in-r
This hands-on training is designed to familiarise you with the data analysis environment of the R programming. In this session, we will traverse into the realm of inferential statistics, beginning with correlation and reliability. We will present a brief conceptual overview and the R procedures for computing reliability and correlation (Pearson’s r, Spearman’s Rho and Kendall’s tau) in real world datasets.
Obtain inferential statistics and assess data normality
Manipulate data and create graphs
Perform Chi-Square tests (Goodness of Fit test and Test of Independence)
Perform correlations on continuous and categorical data (Pearson’s r, Spearman’s Rho and Kendall’s tau)
This course assumes familiarity with R and RStudio. You should have a good understanding of R syntax and basic programming concepts, as well as familiarity with data manipulation (dplyr) and visualisation (ggplot2 package).
Please consider attending Intersect’s following courses to get up to speed: \Learn to Program: R\, \Data Manipulation and Visualisation in R\
training@intersect.org.au
Intersect Australia
R
Data Manipulation in R
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio and the Shiny web application framework.
In this workshop, you will learn how to manipulate, explore and get insights...
Data Manipulation in R
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/r201
https://dresa.org.au/materials/data-manipulation-in-r
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio and the Shiny web application framework.
In this workshop, you will learn how to manipulate, explore and get insights from your data (Data Manipulation using the dplyr package), as well as how to convert your data from one format to another (Data Transformation using the tidyr package).
We teach using RStudio, which allows program code, results, visualisations and documentation to be blended seamlessly.
Join us for a live coding workshop where we write programs that produce results, using the researcher-focused training modules from Intersect and the highly regarded Software Carpentry Foundation.
DataFrame Manipulation using the dplyr package
DataFrame Transformation using the tidyr package
Either \Learn to Program: R\ or \Learn to Program: R\ and \R for Research\ needed to attend this course. If you already have experience with programming, please check the topics covered in the \Learn to Program: R\ and \R for Research\ courses to ensure that you are familiar with the knowledge needed for this course.
training@intersect.org.au
The Carpentries
R
Learn to Program: R
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language of choice for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio development environment and the Shiny web application framework.
But getting started with R can be...
Learn to Program: R
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/r101
https://dresa.org.au/materials/learn-to-program-r
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language of choice for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio development environment and the Shiny web application framework.
But getting started with R can be challenging, particularly if you’ve never programmed before. That’s where this introductory course comes in.
We teach using RStudio, which allows program code, results, visualisations and documentation to be blended seamlessly.
Join us for a live coding workshop where we write programs that produce results, using the researcher-focused training modules from the highly regarded Software Carpentry Foundation.
Introduction to the RStudio interface for programming
Basic syntax and data types in R
How to load external data into R
Creating functions (FUNCTIONS)
Repeating actions and analysing multiple data sets (LOOPS)
Making choices (IF STATEMENTS – CONDITIONALS)
Ways to visualise data in R
No prior experience with programming needed to attend this course.
We strongly recommend attending the Start Coding without Hesitation: Programming Languages Showdown and Thinking like a computer: The Fundamentals of Programming webinars. Recordings of previously delivered webinars can be found \here\.
training@intersect.org.au
The Carpentries
R
Start Coding without Hesitation: Programming Languages Showdown
Programming is becoming more and more popular, with many researchers using programming to perform data cleaning, data manipulation, data analytics, as well as creating publication quality plots. Programming can be really beneficial for automating processes and workflows. In this webinar, we are...
Keywords: Python, R, Matlab, Julia
Start Coding without Hesitation: Programming Languages Showdown
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/coding001
https://dresa.org.au/materials/start-coding-without-hesitation-programming-languages-showdown
Programming is becoming more and more popular, with many researchers using programming to perform data cleaning, data manipulation, data analytics, as well as creating publication quality plots. Programming can be really beneficial for automating processes and workflows. In this webinar, we are exploring four of the most popular programming languages that are widely used in academia, namely Python, R, MATLAB, and Julia.
Why use Programming
An overview of Python, R, MATLAB, and Julia
Code comparison of the four programming languages
Popularity and job opportunities
Intersect’s comparison
General guidelines on how to choose the best programming language for your research
The webinar has no prerequisites.
training@intersect.org.au
Intersect Australia
Python, R, Matlab, Julia
R for Social Scientists
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language of choice for researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio development environment.
But getting started with R can be challenging, particularly if you’ve never programmed before. That’s where this...
R for Social Scientists
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/r103
https://dresa.org.au/materials/r-for-social-scientists
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language of choice for researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio development environment.
But getting started with R can be challenging, particularly if you’ve never programmed before. That’s where this introductory course comes in.
Join us for a live coding workshop where we write programs that produce results, using the researcher-focused training modules from the highly regarded Data Carpentry.
Basic syntax and data types in R
RStudio interface
How to import CSV files into R
The structure of data frames
A brief introduction to data wrangling and data transformation
How to calculate summary statistics
A brief introduction to visualise data
No prior experience with programming needed to attend this course.
training@intersect.org.au
The Carpentries
R
R for Research
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language of choice for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio development environment and the Shiny web application framework.
This workshop is an introduction to data...
R for Research
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/r110
https://dresa.org.au/materials/r-for-research
R is quickly gaining popularity as a programming language of choice for statisticians, data scientists and researchers. It has an excellent ecosystem including the powerful RStudio development environment and the Shiny web application framework.
This workshop is an introduction to data structures (DataFrames) and visualisation (using the ggplot2 package) in R. The targeted audience for this workshop is researchers who are already familiar with the basic concepts in programming such as loops, functions, and conditionals.
We teach using RStudio, which allows program code, results, visualisations and documentation to be blended seamlessly.
Join us for a live coding workshop where we write programs that produce results, using the researcher-focused training modules from the highly regarded Software Carpentry Foundation.
Project Management with RStudio
Introduction to Data Structures in R
Introduction to DataFrames in R
Selecting values in DataFrames
Quick introduction to Plotting using the ggplot2 package
\Learn to Program: R\ or any of the \Learn to Program: Python\, \Learn to Program: MATLAB\, \Learn to Program: Julia\, needed to attend this course. If you already have some experience with programming, please check the topics covered in the \Learn to Program: R\ course to ensure that you are familiar with the knowledge needed for this course.
training@intersect.org.au
The Carpentries
R
A showcase of Data Analysis in Python and R: A case study using COVID-19 data
In all fields of research we are being confronted with a deluge of data; data that needs cleaning and transformation to be used in further analysis. This webinar demonstrates the effective use of programming tools for an initial analysis of COVID-19 datasets, with examples using both R and...
A showcase of Data Analysis in Python and R: A case study using COVID-19 data
https://intersect.org.au/training/course/coding002
https://dresa.org.au/materials/a-showcase-of-data-analysis-in-python-and-r-a-case-study-using-covid-19-data
In all fields of research we are being confronted with a deluge of data; data that needs cleaning and transformation to be used in further analysis. This webinar demonstrates the effective use of programming tools for an initial analysis of COVID-19 datasets, with examples using both R and Python.
Cleaning up a dataset for analysis
Using Jupyter lab for interactive analysis
Making the most of the tidyverse (R) and pandas (python)
Simple data visualisation using ggplot (R) and seaborn (python)
Best practices for readable code
The webinar has no prerequisites.
training@intersect.org.au
Intersect Australia
Python, R