GWG Train the Trainers Workshop: Difference between revisions

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'''Evening Activity is''': Group Dinner, [http://leonardosgainesville.com/706menu.pdfLeonardo’s 706], 7PM - 9PM<br>  
'''Evening Activity is''': Group Dinner, [http://leonardosgainesville.com/706menu.pdf Leonardo’s 706], 7PM - 9PM<br>  





Revision as of 15:32, 4 October 2012

iDigBio GWG first Train the Trainers Workshop:
Expanding the Biodiversity Natural History Collections Georeferencing Community

October 8 - 12, 2012 Gainesville, Florida
iDigBio Offices, 105 Classroom Building

The Train the Trainers Workshop is organized by the iDigBio Georeferencing Working Group and hosted by the Integrated Digitized Biocollections (iDigBio) HUB, a National Resource Center at the University of Florida and Florida State University. The workshop is supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation’s Advancing Digitization of Biodiversity Collections (ADBC) Programs.

Logistics:

Meet the Participants:

Remote Participation:

Reading Materials and Resources:

  1. Georeferencing for Dummies
  2. Guide to Best Practices for Georeferencing - Chapman, A.D. and J. Wieczorek (eds). 2006
  3. iDigBio Georeferencing Wiki
  4. Pre Workshop Survey Questions iDigBio Asked
  5. Group Notes - Take Workshop Notes Together Here
  6. [Post - Workshop Survey Questions]
  7. Got a Georeferencing Question? Post it at the iDigBio Georeferencing Forum

Bring your Datasets and Laptops:

Participants are strongly encouraged to bring representative datasets from their collections that need georeferencing to expose everyone to the variety of locality data georeferencing issues and give the experts and participants a chance to work together to address any challenges.

Participants must bring their own lap-tops and everyone will have wired access to facilitate the best possible workshop experience.

Wireless Access Issues:

Those needing wireless access will need a user name and password and will also need to install a piece of software to make wireless connectivity possible. Kevin Love, iDigBio IT, will be on hand to help with this. Wireless_System

Overview:

Biological specimens vouchered in natural history collections document the historical and modern occurrence of plant and animal species--and most of what we know about the diversity and distribution of life on earth. This workshop addresses a need in the natural history collections community to expand the number of individuals available and able to train natural history collections students, volunteers and staff how to turn text-based locality data into the best georeference possible.

Teaching those with georeferencing experience to teach others begins with the recognition of differences in locality data that exist between specimen preparation types due to their physical properties and discipline-specific handling, collecting and preservation methods, curatorial and conservation practice, storage environments, data conceptualizations, and data label techniques. Georeferencing locality data recorded on tags tied to vertebrate skins, on labels encircling snakes submerged in solutions of alcohol, on the lilliputian labels of pinned insects, and on the large, verbose labels glued on flat sheets of plant specimens, presents specific constraints and opportunities in each case for efficient georeferencing.

Goals of the Workshop:

1. To teach the best effective practices for georeferencing biological specimens for the purpose of creating georeferenced digital database records for publication and for new research applications of the biological, geospatial, and temporal information associated with specimens.
2. To discuss and dissect the dimensions of specific georeferencing needs based on the discipline involved and how to teach others the georeferencing nuances for a given collection type.
3. To engage the community in further dissemination of georeferencing skills and best practices.

Workshop Objectives:

  1. To train a group of professionals from the biological sciences to become georeferencing trainers, via:
    a. Exploration of and experience with the key concepts and best practices of georeferencing using paper maps, online resources, semi-automated, and collaborative tools.
    b. Training in workflows, processes, and techniques needed to prepare data sets for georeferencing and improving data quality and fitness for use.
    c. Discussion and insight into how to plan and prepare for the presentation of a georeferencing workshop for others in the biodiversity and digitization communities.
  2. To provide georeferencing support to Thematic Collections Networks involved in the digitization of data for the Advancing Digitization of Biological Collections program of the National Science Foundation through:
    a. Identification and examination of potential roadblocks and impediments to the the georeferencing process.
    b. Provision of solutions and recommended workflows, processes, and tools to meet the goals of the TCNs.
    c. Discussion of the inputs and costs necessary to create successful and efficient georeferencing projects at scale.
  3. To establish an updating resource for the TCNs and the broad community within the biodiversity sciences, via:
    a.Creation of a roster of georeferencing “experts” able and willing to provide to support to individuals and groups within their geographic region and professional discipline.
    b. A resource for said “experts” to share their experiences (successes, failures, and recommendations) for the benefit of the broad community.

Desired Outcomes:

1. Participants’ georeferencing skills are enhanced after the workshop. (leave knowing more than when they arrived).
2. Each participant presents a georeferenced data set at the end of the workshop to the group.
3. Participants provide feedback - for the further development of this course.
4. Participants plan / outline a georeferencing workshop - share the plan with the group.
5. Participants share their future plans for when and where they will conduct their first training.
(post to iDigBio)
6. Participants fill out a post-workshop survey to assist in evaluating the workshop and contribute suggestions for the next workshop.
7. iDigBio Georeferencing Working Group utilizes outcomes / survey results to help shape future efforts and the next Train the Trainers Georeferencing Workshop.
8. Report back to NSF about survey results and workshop outcomes for future planning.


Informal Reception at (TBD) for any arriving on Sunday evening, 7 PM, October 7th.


Schedule of Events

Breakfast every day is on our own. It's available at the hotel and there's a place near the hotel called "Bagels and Noodles" that also has breakfast. You'll be reimbursed at the standard per diem rates.

Day 1, Monday October 8th

Time
Activity
Presenter
9:00
Welcome & iDigBio Overview
iDigBio PI
Debbie Paul & Gil Nelson

9:10
Meet iDigBio - PI’s and Project Managers
PI: Pam Soltis, David Jennings, Joanna McCaffrey (5 minutes each)

Debbie Paul
9:25
Trainer Introductions
David Bloom

Participants Introductions - InvertNet


Participants Introductions - SCAN


Participants Introductions - Paleoniches


Participants Introductions - Macrofungi


Participants Introductions - LBCC


Participants Introductions - TTD


Participants Introductions - MNEV


Participants Introductions - Other Projects

10:00
Workshop Overview, Introduction to Georeferencing, and Thinking like a Trainer
David Bloom/
John Wieczorek

10:20
Train-the-Trainers Georeferencing Pre-workshop Survey Report
Shari Ellis
10:35
Break (Pascals)

11:00
Collaboration and Automation
John Wieczorek
11:30
Geographical Concepts
Nelson Rios
11:50
Point-Radius Method and Best Practices
David Bloom
12:10
Darwin Core Standard, Key Terminology
John Wieczorek
12:30
Lunch catered - "Tempo Bistro To Go"

13:30
Georeferencing for Dummies, Locality Types, and Georeferencing Template
Carol Spencer
14:40
Georeferencing Calculator
John Wieczorek
15:30
Break (Pascals)

16:00
Georeferencing Calculator Example and Exercises
John Wieczorek
17:00
Day in Review and Considerations for Trainers-to-be
(Trivia Question - Paul)

David Bloom
17:30
End


Dinner on our own - See list of local restaurants. You'll be reimbursed at the standard per diem rates.

Optional Evening Activity is:
Oct. 8 | 6:30 p.m. Work out where the Gators play. 60 minutes of interval training inside Ben Hill Griffin Stadium. Hosted by the world famous Florida Track Club: floridatrackclub.org



Day 2, Tuesday October 9th

Time
Activity
Presenter
9:00
Review and Questions
All
9:20
Meet iDigBio PI Larry Page
Debbie Paul
9:30
Internet Resources - Where to Begin?
Carol Spencer
10:00
Exercises: Internet Resources
All
10:30
Break (Pascals)

11:00
Exercises: Internet Resources (continued)
All
12:15
More Online Resources (resources used by/requested by participants)
David Bloom
12:30
Lunch catered by Panera

13:30
GPS Exercise Introduction
John Wieczorek
13:45
GPS Exercises (outside)
All
15:15
Group Photo (outside)
All
15:30
Break (Pascals)

16:00
Georeferencing Using Paper Maps, Paper Maps Handout
David Bloom
17:00
Day in Review and Considerations for Trainers-to-be
(Trivia Question - Paul)

David Bloom
17:30
END

Dinner on our own - See list of local restaurants. You'll be reimbursed at the standard per diem rates.

Optional Evening Activities are:
Oct. 9 | 7-8:30 p.m. Water Sustainability: Public Challenges, Private Choices, with Pierce Jones, Ph.D., Professor and Director, UF Program for Resource Efficient Communities; Joe Delfino, Ph.D., Professor, UF Environmental Engineering Sciences; and Wendy Graham, Ph.D., Carl S. Swisher Chair in Water Resources and Director, UF Water Institute. The Water: Discovering and Sharing Solutions exhibit is open 6-7 p.m.
Location: Florida Museum of Natural History, 3215 Hull Road - Desserts and cash bar available.

To help plan for this free program, please RSVP at least one week in advance of the café date with your name and the number attending by emailing aerickson@flmnh.ufl.edu or calling Amanda Harvey, 352-273-2062.


Oct 9 | 7-10p.m. Team Trivia: The Laboratory : http://thelaboratorycafe.tk/

Oct 9 | 6:15 p.m. Campus 4 Miler. A group from the Florida Track Club meets at the north end of Ben Hill Griffin Stadium to run a scenic 4 mile route through the UF campus. The pace usually ranges from 8-10 min/miles, although runners of all abilities are encouraged to participate!



Day 3, Wednesday October 10th

Time
Activity
Presenter
9:00
Review and Questions
All
9:20
Meet iDigBio PI Gregory Riccardi
Debbie Paul
9:30
Exercises: Using Paper Maps
All
10:30
Break (Pascals)

11:00
Exercises: Using Paper Maps (continued)
All
12:30
Lunch on our own. See local restaurant map

13:30
Exercises: Using Paper Maps (continued)
All
14:40
Examples and Discussion: Process, Workflows, and Collaborations

15:30
Break (Pascals)

16:00
Process, Workflows, and Collaborations (continued)
John Wieczorek
17:00
Day in Review and Considerations for Trainers-to-be, Volunteers for Training Demos
(Trivia Question - Paul)

David Bloom
17:30
Specify and Georeferencing: Tools and Workflows
Video
18:00
End

Dinner on our own - See list of local restaurants. You'll be reimbursed at the standard per diem rates.

Optional Evening Activity is:
Downtown Gainesville, Union Street Farmers Market, 4 - 7 PM. Food and live music.
http://unionstreetfarmersmkt.com/index.php/vendors



Day 4, Thursday October 11th

Time
Activity
Presenter
9:00
Meet iDigBio PI Bruce MacFadden
Debbie Paul
9:10
Results: Paper Maps
Carol Spencer
10:00
Paper Maps Review
John Wieczorek
10:30
Break (Pascals)

11:00
Good and Bad Localities, Field Locality Handout
David Bloom
11:15
Introduction to GEOLocate Project
Nelson Rios
12:00
Lunch on our own. See local restaurant map

13:00
Using GEOLocate: Basics (Web Application)
Nelson Rios
13:30
Using GEOLocate: Batch Processing (Web App and Excel)
Nelson Rios
14:10
Using GEOLocate: Collaborative Georeferencing Administrative Portal
Nelson Rios
15:10
Using GEOLocate: Web Client
Nelson Rios
15:30
Break (Pascals)

16:00
Prioritizing Data: Getting the most bang for your buck, Picking low hanging fruit
Nelson Rios
16:15
Advanced GEOLocate: Taxon validation, Web services & integration, Building end to end georeferencing workflows
Nelson Rios
17:00
Day in Review and Considerations for Trainers-to-be
(Trivia Question - Debbie Paul)

Bloom
17:30
Symbiota and Georeferencing: Tools and Workflows
Video
18:00
End

Evening Activity is: Group Dinner, Leonardo’s 706, 7PM - 9PM



Day 5, Friday October 12th

Time
Activity
Presenter
9:00
Meet iDigBio PI Jose Fortes (5 minutes)

9:07
BioGeomancer Georeferencing Workbench
John Wieczorek
9:45
BioGeomancer Workbench, Batch Processing
John Wieczorek
10:30
Break (Pascals)

11:00
Data Set Preparation/BioGeomancer Project Exercises
John Wieczorek
12:00
Open Work Session - Participant/TCN Georeferencing Projects (use those data sets)
All
12:30
Lunch on our own. See local restaurant map

13:30
Open Work Session (continued)
All
14:30
Volunteer Training Demos
Trainees
15:30
Break (Pascals)

16:00
Workshop Evaluations
All
16:30
Day in Review and Considerations for Trainers-you-now-be
David Bloom
17:00
Workshop Summary
John Wieczorek
17:30
End

Dinner on our own - See list of local restaurants. You'll be reimbursed at the standard per diem rates. Leaving tomorrow? Want to get together for dinner or hang out at the hotel pool?

Optional Friday night activities:
free concerts downtown (same location as the wed night farmers mkt) - http://www.gvlculturalaffairs.org/website/programs_events/plaza_series/plaza.html