Foster Open Science Learning Objectives

Cite this publication

​Foster Open Science Learning Objectives​
Grigorov, I.; Carvalho, J.; Ball, D.; Bjørnshauge, L.; Cancillieri, M.; Davidson, J.& Dazy, A. et al.​ (2015). DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/ZENODO.15603 

Documents & Media

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Grigorov, Ivo; Carvalho, Jose; Ball, David; Bjørnshauge, Lars; Cancillieri, Matthew; Davidson, Joy; Dazy, Andre; Donnelly, Martin; Franck, Gwen; Hjubers, Leon; Jones, Sarah; Knoth, Peter; Kuchma, Iryna; Melero, Reme; North, Dan; Orth, Astrid ; Pontika, Nancy; Reilly, Susan; Rodrigues, Eloy; Schmidt, Birgit ; Swan, Alma
Abstract
This brief outlines simplified Open Science Learning Objectives for the main stakeholders in the Research Ecosystem. Learning Objectives are structured by Open Science Topics according to a functional Open Science Taxonomy (Pontica et al., 2015), that accompany the main responsibilities of each stakeholders along the Research Lifecycle. The ultimate objective is to support the integration of Open Science best practices into the daily routine of performing and supporting research, to underpin implementation of Horizon 2020 Mandate on Access to Scientific Information, and augment the “societal impact” and uptake of research, for the benefit of all stakeholders in the knowledge creation process (ultimately underpinning “co-creation”). Specific Learning Objectives are structured in increasing level of competence, frequently ending with successful integration of Open Science best practices in the daily research routine, facilitating self-assessment of the personal workflow. The Learning Objectives can provide a backbone for a structured learning plan for Doctoral Schools with the ambition to train future researchers in optimizing their societal impact, alongside research excellence training, as well as preparing graduates for new and emerging research impact measures and criteria. Support with relevant training content will be provided in parallel through the FOSTER Portal and accompanying e-Learning and self-learning modules. The brief draws on FP7 FOSTER Work Packages 2 Content, WP3 Portal (Open Science Taxonomy, and learning portal infrastructure) and WP4 Training (Deliverable D4.5 Training ToolKit). RATIONALE: The political drive for Open Science from the funding agency (EC[1]) point of view is mainly Return On Investment (ROI), ethics (taxpayer access to public funded research), and stimulating Open Innovation[2] through free-flow of ideas in order to boost economic growth through transfer of knowledge to the knowledge-based Small/Medium Enterprises (SMEs). The Open Science community of advocates and practitioners a diverse one, spanning the full breadth of research disciplines, as well as a range of stakeholders with various vested interests and roles in the research process. The cumulative effect is that there is a rich diversity of strong reasons for and against making “Open Science” the default setting in the research process. Consultation by FP7 FOSTER of 90 researchers from various disciplines (Fig. 1; attendees of the...
Issue Date
2015
Project
FOSTER 
Language
English

Reference

Citations


Social Media