Welcome to the 5th cohort of OLS program!

Niklas Morberg (CC BY-NC 2.0)

The OLS-5 program

Purpose: Training for early stage researchers and young leaders interested in furthering their Open Science skills

Outcome: Ambassadors for Open Science practice, training and education across multiple European and international bioinformatics communities.

Process: A 16-week mentoring & training program, based on the Mozilla Open Leader program, helping participants in becoming Open Science ambassadors by using three principles:

  1. Sharing essential knowledge required to create, lead, and sustain an Open Science project.
  2. Connecting members across different communities, backgrounds, and identities by creating space in this program for them to share their experiences and expertise.
  3. Empowering them to become effective Open Science ambassadors in their communities.

Goals and Learning Objectives

The vision of Open Life Science program is to strengthen Open Science skills for early stage researchers and young leaders in life science.

At the end of the program, our participants will be able to:

  • Describe and define the terms openness, open science, open leadership, community interactions, value exchanges, inclusivity, accessibility, open Science practices in developing resources and training
  • Learn how to apply those principles to open leadership and working open in their projects and communities . Learn how to collect, invite, and tell stories that demonstrate how and why openness benefits the communities they serve
  • Give original examples for the types of openness in science
  • Design
    • Illustrate the need for a project, its vision, and its goals
    • Embrace and communicate the benefits of Open Science and how to strategically apply different open practices to their work
    • Identify the public resources to share their data
    • Identify the different type of Open Access and associated journals
  • Build
    • Start any project with openness in mind from day one
    • Setup a project repository on GitHub using best practices for enabling collaboration
    • Choose and apply open licenses appropriately
  • Empower
    • Create and enforce a safe working environment
    • Promote the values of Open Science to empower others to lead and collaborate
    • Include a broad range of contributors in their work
    • Communicate their work and vision in a 2min demo of elevator pitch
  • Lead an open project in science

Timeline

Schedule

During the program,

  • Mentors and mentees meet every 2 weeks for a 30 minutes call
  • Mentees participate every ~2 weeks to 90-minutes cohort calls during which the program leaders introduce new topics and resources, facilitate break-out discussions, and invite expert from the field to give talks
  • Mentees can participate to skill-up, Q&A or coworking session in the weeks without cohort calls
  • Mentors take part to mentoring workshop and calls

OLS schedule overview. In the middle, the timeline represents the 16 weeks. On the top, boxes in green represent the 8 different cohort calls pointing to the corresponding weeks (even week numbers). Below the week timeline, blue boxes represent the mentor-mentee meetings pointing to the uneven number weeks. Below the blue boxes, are red boxes corresponding to 3 skill-up calls: "GitHub tutorial for beginners" (week 5), "Open Leadership: Academia, industry, and beyond" (week 9), "Self-care & social call" (week 1s)

Organizers will inform participants of the week schedule by email.

Subscribe to the OLS calendar

Week Call Date Topic Agenda
Week 00 (start. February 21, 2022) Mentor February 21, 2022 (18:00 Universal Time) Mentor onboarding group 1  
  Mentor February 22, 2022 (10:00 Universal Time) Mentor Skill Workshop by 360 Training - Group 1  
Week 01 (start. February 28, 2022) Mentor-Mentee   1st mentor-mentee meeting  
  Mentor March 02, 2022 (10:00 Universal Time) Mentor onboarding group 2  
  Mentor (15:00 Universal Time) Mentor onboarding group 1  
  Mentor March 02, 2022 (14:00 Universal Time) Mentor Skill Workshop by 360 Training - Group 2  
  Mentor March 03, 2022 (18:00 Universal Time) Mentor Skill Workshop by 360 Training - Group 3  
Week 02 (start. March 07, 2022) Cohort March 07, 2022 (18:00 Universal Time) Welcome to Open Life Science!  
Week 03 (start. March 14, 2022) Mentor-Mentee   2nd mentor-mentee meeting  
  Cohort March 16, 2022 (11:00 Universal Time) Welcome to Open Life Science!  
Week 04 (start. March 21, 2022) Cohort March 23, 2022 (11:00 Universal Time) Tooling and roadmapping for Open projects  
Week 05 (start. March 28, 2022) Mentor-Mentee   3rd mentor-mentee meeting  
  Skill-up March 28, 2022 (18:00 Universal Time) GitHub tutorial for beginners  
Week 06 (start. April 04, 2022) Cohort April 04, 2022 (18:00 Universal Time) Open Science I: Project Development and Introduction to Working Open  
Week 07 (start. April 11, 2022) Mentor-Mentee   4th mentor-mentee meeting  
  Q&A April 13, 2022 (11:00 Universal Time) Q&A call  
Week 08 (start. April 18, 2022) Cohort April 20, 2022 (11:00 Universal Time) Community design for inclusivity  
Week 09 (start. April 25, 2022) Mentor-Mentee   5th mentor-mentee meeting  
  Skill-up April 25, 2022 (18:00 Universal Time) Open Leadership: Academia, industry and beyond!  
Week 10 (start. May 02, 2022) Cohort May 02, 2022 (18:00 Universal Time) Open Science II: Knowledge Dissemination  
Week 11 (start. May 09, 2022) Mentor-Mentee   6th mentor-mentee meeting  
  Q&A May 11, 2022 (11:00 Universal Time) Q&A call  
Week 12 (start. May 16, 2022) Cohort May 18, 2022 (11:00 Universal Time) Diversity and Inclusion & Ally skills  
Week 13 (start. May 23, 2022) Mentor-Mentee   7th mentor-mentee meeting  
  Skill-up May 23, 2022 (18:00 Universal Time) Self-care & Social call  
Week 14 (start. May 30, 2022) Cohort May 30, 2022 (18:00 Universal Time) Open Science III: Next steps in open  
Week 15 (start. June 06, 2022) Mentor-Mentee   8th mentor-mentee meeting  
  Skill-up June 07, 2022 (10:00 Universal Time) Final presentation rehearsal - Group 1  
  Skill-up June 08, 2022 (15:00 Universal Time) Final presentation rehearsal - Group 2  
  Skill-up June 09, 2022 (18:00 Universal Time) Final presentation rehearsal - Group 3  
Week 16 (start. June 13, 2022) Cohort June 14, 2022 (10:00 Universal Time) Final presentations & Graduation! - Group 1  
  Cohort June 15, 2022 (15:00 Universal Time) Final presentations & Graduation! - Group 2  
  Cohort June 16, 2022 (18:00 Universal Time) Final presentations & Graduation! - Group 3  
  Cohort July 18, 2022 (10:00 Universal Time) Final presentations & Graduation! - Group 4  
  Cohort July 20, 2022 (18:00 Universal Time) Final presentations & Graduation! - Group 5  

Role Descriptions

Project leads (aka Mentees)

Participants join this program with a project that they either are already working on or want to develop during this program. More details about the role of a project lead (mentee) can be found here.

For the fifth round of the Open Life Science program, we welcome 71 participants with 34 projects.

Mentors

Our project leads are supported in this program by our mentor-community who are paired based on the compatibility of expertise, interests and requirements of their projects. Our mentors are Open Science practitioners and champions with previous experiences in training and mentoring. They are currently working in different professions in data science, publishing, community building, software development, clinical studies, industries, scientific training and IT services.

Mentors advise and inspire

  • Connect: to people, programs, companies
  • Recommend: resources, readings, classes, experiences
  • Feedback: for the project leads to consider

Pool of mentors

We thank the 35 mentors this round.

The GitHub avatar of

Alejandro Coca Castro

Pronouns: His/Him
@alejo_coca

The Alan Turing Institute

Expertise:
Spatial data science, Satellite imagery, Environmental science

More about Alejandro

The GitHub avatar of

Anne Fouilloux

Pronouns: she/her
@AnneFouilloux

Nordic E-Infrastructure Collaboration (Neic), University Of Oslo, Norway.

Expertise:
Open science, Reproducible research, Fair software, Fair data

More about Anne

The GitHub avatar of

Anne Treasure

@annemtreasure

Independent Consultant

Expertise:
Data life cycle, Data management, Open data, Open science, Reproducible research, Data sharing, Data curation, Ecology, Marine & terrestrial sciences, Invasion biology, Climate change, Data pipelines & workflows, Biodiversity, Environment, Polar science, Capacity development, Skills training, Data science

More about Anne

The GitHub avatar of

Arielle Bennett

Pronouns: she/her
@biotechchat

The Alan Turing Institute

Expertise:
Road mapping and strategy planning, Community consultation, Culture change, Code of conducts, Community goals, Drug discovery, Computational biology, Neuroscience.

More about Arielle

The GitHub avatar of

Batool Almarzouq

Pronouns: She/Her
@batool664

Open Science Saudi Arabia

Expertise:
Reproducibility, Computational biology

More about Batool

The GitHub avatar of

Beatriz Serrano-Solano

Pronouns: she/her
@BSerranoSolano

University Of Freiburg

Expertise:
Image analysis; data science; community; project management

More about Beatriz

The GitHub avatar of

Burce Elbasan


University Ulm

Expertise:
Cancer biology, Brain tumors, Molecular genetics, Molecular mechanisms of cancer pathogenesis
The GitHub avatar of

Deepak Unni

Pronouns: He/Him
@deepakunni3

Sib Swiss Institute Of Bioinformatics

Expertise:
Fair, Knowledge graphs, Terminologies, Bio(medical) ontologies, Data modeling, Data integration

More about Deepak

The GitHub avatar of

Diego Onna

Pronouns: He/Him
@DiegoOnna

Universidad De Buenos Aires

Expertise:
Chemistry of materials, Nanomaterials, Machine learning, Chemometrics, Photochemistry, Physical chemistry, Chemical education

More about Diego

The GitHub avatar of

Emma Karoune

Pronouns: she/her
@ekaroune

The Alan Turing Institute And Historic England

Expertise:
Fair data, Sensitive data, Community building, Open publishing, Phytoliths, Environmental archaeology, Palaeoecology

More about Emma

The GitHub avatar of

Emmy Tsang

Pronouns: she/her
@emmy_ft

Role in OLS: Director of Finance and Operations

Expertise:
Community strategies, Open research

More about Emmy

The GitHub avatar of

Esther Plomp

Pronouns: she/her/hers
@PhDToothFAIRy

Delft University Of Technology - Faculty Of Applied Sciences

Expertise:
Open protocols, Open data, Research data management, FAIR, Archaeology, Bioanthropology, Isotopes, Osteology

More about Esther

The GitHub avatar of

Fotis Psomopoulos

Pronouns: he/him
@fopsom

Institute Of Applied Biosciences, Centre For Research And Technology Hellas

Expertise:
Bioinformatics, Machine learning, Training

More about Fotis

The GitHub avatar of

Georgia Aitkenhead

Pronouns: She/her

The Alan Turing Institute

Expertise:
Citizen science, Participatory science, Open source, Neurodiversity, Sensory processing, Co-creation

More about Georgia

The GitHub avatar of

Gracielle Higino

Pronouns: She/her
@graciellehigino

University Of British Columbia

Expertise:
Reproducibility, Open data, Data management, Collaboration, Data synthesis, Science communication, Ecology, Biodiversity

More about Gracielle

The GitHub avatar of

Julien Colomb

Pronouns: he/his
@j_colomb

Hu Berlin

Expertise:
Neurobiology

More about Julien

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Stephan Heunis

Pronouns: he/him
@fmrwhy

Research Center Juelich, Germany

Expertise:
Research data management, Open source tools for code and data sharing, Signal processing with python;

More about Stephan

The GitHub avatar of

Lena Karvovskaya

Pronouns: She/her
@Langdata

Vu Amsterdam

Expertise:
Community management, Rdm, Open science

More about Lena

The GitHub avatar of

Caleb Kibet

Pronouns: he/him
@calkibet

Expertise:
Community building, Reproducibility, Computational Biology, Regulatory Genomics

More about Caleb

The GitHub avatar of

Katharina Lauer

Pronouns: she/her
@lauerkatharina

Elixir

Expertise:
Infectious diseases, Data driven life sciences, Entrepreneurship, Strategy, External relations

More about Katharina

The GitHub avatar of

Lisanna Paladin

Pronouns: She/they
@LisannaPaladin

Embl Heidelberg

Expertise:
Protein structure, Protein features, Computational biology, Bioinformatics, Software engineering, Training

More about Lisanna

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Luis Pedro Coelho

Pronouns: he/them
@luispedrocoelho

Fudan University

Expertise:
Microbiome, Computational biology

More about Luis Pedro

The GitHub avatar of

Malvika Sharan

Pronouns: she/her
@malvikasharan

The Alan Turing Institute

Role in OLS: Director of Partnerships and Strategy

Expertise:
Community building, Mentoring, Data Science best practices, Reproducibility, Inclusive and collaborative practices, Python, Version Control, Funding Proposals, Bioinformatics, Algorithm design

More about Malvika

The GitHub avatar of

Meag Doherty

Pronouns: she/her
@emdohh

Expertise:
Product strategy, Go to market, User research

More about Meag

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Michael Addy

Pronouns: He

Kwame Nkrumah University Of Science And Technology

Expertise:
Building energy, Digital construction

More about Michael

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Mayya Sundukova

Pronouns: she/her
@mayya_sundukova

Igdore

Role in OLS: Resident Fellow

Expertise:
Neuroscience, Microscopy, Imaging, Electrophysiology, Biophysics, Mental health, Journaling, Therapeutic writing facilitation, Life coaching, Career development
The GitHub avatar of

Muhammet Celik

Pronouns: he/him

The GitHub avatar of

Alexander Martinez Mendez

@mxrtinez

Universidad Industrial De Santander / La-Conga Physics

Expertise:
Science reproducibility; open software; linux

More about Alexander

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Patricia Herterich

Pronouns: she/her
@pherterich

Dcc, University Of Edinburgh

Role in OLS: Fellowship and Finance Manager

Expertise:
Research data management, Fair data, Collaboration, Library and archiving skills, Open science and community

More about Patricia

The GitHub avatar of

Sara Villa

Pronouns: she/her
@VillaScience

King'S College London

Expertise:
Molecular biology, Genomics, Sequencing, Project management

More about Sara

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Andres Sebastian Ayala Ruano

Pronouns: he/him
@sayalaruano

Maastricht University

Expertise:
Bioinformatics; cheminformatics; drug discovery; network science; machine learning; data science; open science

More about Andres Sebastian

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Sara El-Gebali

Pronouns: She, her
@yalahowy

Scilifelab / FAIRPoints Project

Expertise:
Research data management, Open science, Fair principles, Inclusion & equity

More about Sara

The GitHub avatar of

Stephen Klusza

Pronouns: he/him/his
@codebiologist

Atlanta Metropolitan State College, Adjunct Faculty and Laboratory Professional for Biology

Expertise:
Life sciences, Genetics, Synthetic biology, Accessibility

More about Stephen

The GitHub avatar of

Renato Alves

Pronouns: he/him
@renato_alvs

European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL)

Expertise:
Full-stack developer, Computational Training, Reproducibility, Computational biology, Metagenomics, Meta-transcriptomics

More about Renato

The GitHub avatar of

Yo Yehudi

Pronouns: they/them
@yoyehudi

Role in OLS: Executive Director, Business and Development Lead

Expertise:
Software development, Community building, Mentoring

More about Yo

Mentoring training

Mentorship roles can sound like a big personal responsibility and can be overwhelming for new mentors. To support our mentors in this program, we will offer training, topic-based guided discussions and opportunity for social interaction over 4 calls during the mentorship round:

  • 2 training calls in the beginning of the cohort to get participants trained and prepared for their role as mentors
  • 1 catch-up call in the middle of the cohort to discuss new topics and challenges that might have occurred and address them
  • 1 call at the end to capture experiences of mentors and assess their interest in future cohorts
  • Social and co-working calls schedule will be agreed among the mentors as per their needs and interests

In the mentor training, our mentors will then gain mentoring skills (active listening, effective questioning, giving feedback), learn to celebrate successes and gain confidence on navigating challenges in mentoring.

A dedicated slack channel will facilitate open discussions among mentors to help them discuss their experiences, challenges and tips and tricks (contact the team if you are not yet on this channel).

Experts

Experts are invited to join cohort calls or individual mentorship calls to share their experience and expertise during the program.

We thank the 26 persons who registered to be experts in this round.

The GitHub avatar of

Alexandra Holinski

Pronouns: She/her

EMBL-EBI

Expertise:
Scientific Education and Training, Course development, Course design, Course delivery, Methods of interactive delivery (face-to-face and virtual courses), Online training, Community building, Open Science, FAIR principles, Principles of FAIRification of (training) material, Protein Biochemistry

More about Alexandra

The GitHub avatar of

Alex Chan

Pronouns: they/she
@alexwlchan

Wellcome Collection

The GitHub avatar of

Anne Treasure

@annemtreasure

Independent Consultant

Expertise:
Data life cycle, Data management, Open data, Open science, Reproducible research, Data sharing, Data curation, Ecology, Marine & terrestrial sciences, Invasion biology, Climate change, Data pipelines & workflows, Biodiversity, Environment, Polar science, Capacity development, Skills training, Data science

More about Anne

The GitHub avatar of

Cassandra Gould Van Praag

Pronouns: she/her
@cassgvp

University Of Oxford

Expertise:
Neuroimaging, Community, Edi, Champions/ambassadors programme, Data sharing, Incentives/reward, Academia-to-professional services transition / research adjacent roles, Transparent and inclusive leadership.

More about Cassandra

The GitHub avatar of

Deepak Unni

Pronouns: He/Him
@deepakunni3

Sib Swiss Institute Of Bioinformatics

Expertise:
Fair, Knowledge graphs, Terminologies, Bio(medical) ontologies, Data modeling, Data integration

More about Deepak

The GitHub avatar of

Edward Wallace

Pronouns: he, him
@ewjwallace

University Of Edinburgh

Expertise:
Gene expression, Rna, Yeast & fungi, Bioinformatics, Open science, Data literacy, Open science in project and teaching context, Practical github, R packages, Balancing open science with the rest of your career;

More about Edward

The GitHub avatar of

Georgia Aitkenhead

Pronouns: She/her

The Alan Turing Institute

Expertise:
Citizen science, Participatory science, Open source, Neurodiversity, Sensory processing, Co-creation

More about Georgia

The GitHub avatar of

Gudrun Gygli

Expertise:
Enzymology, Biochemstry, Bioinformatics, Molecular modelling, Molecular dynamics simulations, Deep eutectic solvents, Oxidoreductases, Data stewardship, Laboratory automation, Fair data

More about Gudrun

The GitHub avatar of

Hao Ye

Pronouns: he/him
@Hao_and_Y

University of Pennsylvania / Community for Rigor

Expertise:
Ecology, Health sciences, R, Git and github, Version control, Time series analysis, Research reproducibility, Community management, Ally skills training

More about Hao

The GitHub avatar of

Irene Ramos

Pronouns: she / her

National Commission For The Knowledge And Use Of Biodiversity (Conabio)

Role in OLS: NASA Cohort Coordinator (contract)

Expertise:
Fair, Open data, Data management, Agrobiodiversity, Sustainability, Transdisciplinary research

More about Irene

The GitHub avatar of

Iratxe Puebla

Pronouns: she/her
@IratxePuebla

Asapbio

Expertise:
Preprints, Publishing, Open access, Data publication

More about Iratxe

The GitHub avatar of

Jesper Dramsch

Pronouns: they/them
@jesperdramsch

Ecmwf

Expertise:
Machine learning, Diversity

More about Jesper

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Jez Cope

Pronouns: he/him
@jezcope

The British Library

Expertise:
Research data management, Digital scholarship, Libraries, Open research, Open data, Open scholarship, Open science, Research software engineering practice, Neurodiversity, Glam

More about Jez

The GitHub avatar of

Joyce Kao

Pronouns: She/Her
@joyceykao

University Hospital Rwth Aachen

Expertise:
Open innovation, Digitalization

More about Joyce

The GitHub avatar of

Stephan Heunis

Pronouns: he/him
@fmrwhy

Research Center Juelich, Germany

Expertise:
Research data management, Open source tools for code and data sharing, Signal processing with python;

More about Stephan

The GitHub avatar of

Lena Karvovskaya

Pronouns: She/her
@Langdata

Vu Amsterdam

Expertise:
Community management, Rdm, Open science

More about Lena

The GitHub avatar of

Katharina Lauer

Pronouns: she/her
@lauerkatharina

Elixir

Expertise:
Infectious diseases, Data driven life sciences, Entrepreneurship, Strategy, External relations

More about Katharina

The GitHub avatar of

Laura Carter

Pronouns: she/her
@LauraC_rter

University Of Essex

Expertise:
Human rights; gender; sexuality; critical data studies

More about Laura

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Luis Pedro Coelho

Pronouns: he/them
@luispedrocoelho

Fudan University

Expertise:
Microbiome, Computational biology

More about Luis Pedro

The GitHub avatar of

Mayya Sundukova

Pronouns: she/her
@mayya_sundukova

Igdore

Role in OLS: Resident Fellow

Expertise:
Neuroscience, Microscopy, Imaging, Electrophysiology, Biophysics, Mental health, Journaling, Therapeutic writing facilitation, Life coaching, Career development
The GitHub avatar of

Patricia Herterich

Pronouns: she/her
@pherterich

Dcc, University Of Edinburgh

Role in OLS: Fellowship and Finance Manager

Expertise:
Research data management, Fair data, Collaboration, Library and archiving skills, Open science and community

More about Patricia

The GitHub avatar of

Raphael Sonabend

Pronouns: They/He
@RaphaelS101

Wellcome

Expertise:
Machine learning, Ethical modelling, Risk and uncertainty communication, Transparent and accessible ai, Automl, Benchmarking, Survival analysis (and fundamental problems)

More about Raphael

The GitHub avatar of

Renato Augusto Correa Dos Santos

Pronouns: He
@CorreaSantosRA

Changing From Unicamp To Another Institution (Post-Doc)

Expertise:
Bioinformatics, Genomics, Transcriptomics, Omics, Education

More about Renato Augusto

The GitHub avatar of

Sara El-Gebali

Pronouns: She, her
@yalahowy

Scilifelab / FAIRPoints Project

Expertise:
Research data management, Open science, Fair principles, Inclusion & equity

More about Sara

The GitHub avatar of

Stefanie Butland

Pronouns: she/her
@stefaniebutland

Ropensci

Expertise:
Building inclusive sustainable communities, Communicating in the open, Virtual events, Github, r, Open software peer review

More about Stefanie

The GitHub avatar of

Teresa Cisneros

@chicanaEnLondon

Expertise:
Equity, Diversity and inclusion (transformative justice approaches)

More about Teresa

Experts sorted by their expertise areas

A dedicated slack channel will facilitate open discussions among experts and other participants in OLS-5 to help them expand their network while discussing relevant topics (contact the team if you are not yet on this channel).

Facilitators

Facilitators work closely with the OLS organisers to manage and run cohort calls. They lead efforts in preparing cohort call notes, co-hosting cohort calls and ensuring the sharing of call recordings and resources through OLS channelss

We thank the 5 persons who facilitated in this round.

The GitHub avatar of

Batool Almarzouq

Pronouns: She/Her
@batool664

Open Science Saudi Arabia

Expertise:
Reproducibility, Computational biology

More about Batool

The GitHub avatar of

Festus Nyasimi

Pronouns: He/Him
@Festus_nyasimi

International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE)

Expertise:
Bioinformatics, Data Science, Python, Biomedical Research

More about Festus

The GitHub avatar of

Michael Landi

Pronouns: He/Him
@CofiaLandy

Swedish University Of Agricultural Sciences

Expertise:
Bioinformatics, Genome assembly, Epigenetics

More about Michael

The GitHub avatar of

Manuel Lera Ramirez

Pronouns: He/him
@manu_lera

Institut Curie

Expertise:
Biophysics, Genetics, Image analysis

More about Manuel

The GitHub avatar of

Mayya Sundukova

Pronouns: she/her
@mayya_sundukova

Igdore

Role in OLS: Resident Fellow

Expertise:
Neuroscience, Microscopy, Imaging, Electrophysiology, Biophysics, Mental health, Journaling, Therapeutic writing facilitation, Life coaching, Career development

Organizers

The GitHub avatar of

Bérénice Batut

Pronouns: she/her
@bebatut

University of Freiburg

Role in OLS: Director of Learning and Technology

Expertise:
Galaxy, Galaxy training, Citizen science, Bioinformatics, High-throughput sequencing, Metagenomics, Wordpress, Jekyll, GitHub/GitLab Pages, Designing and developing training material, Collaborating with Git & GitHub/GitLab, Git, GitHub, GitLab, Publishing web content

More about Bérénice

The GitHub avatar of

Emmy Tsang

Pronouns: she/her
@emmy_ft

Role in OLS: Director of Finance and Operations

Expertise:
Community strategies, Open research

More about Emmy

The GitHub avatar of

Malvika Sharan

Pronouns: she/her
@malvikasharan

The Alan Turing Institute

Role in OLS: Director of Partnerships and Strategy

Expertise:
Community building, Mentoring, Data Science best practices, Reproducibility, Inclusive and collaborative practices, Python, Version Control, Funding Proposals, Bioinformatics, Algorithm design

More about Malvika

The GitHub avatar of

Paz Bernaldo

Pronouns: she/her
@PazByC

Role in OLS: Community Researcher & Programme Coordinator (contract)

Expertise:
Qualitative research, Inequities, Inequalities in technology.

More about Paz

The GitHub avatar of

Yo Yehudi

Pronouns: they/them
@yoyehudi

Role in OLS: Executive Director, Business and Development Lead

Expertise:
Software development, Community building, Mentoring

More about Yo

Collaborators

OLS team have established the following collaborations to support organisation specific projects within the OLS-5 cohort:

OLS-5 for EOSC-Life

Open Life Science has received the EOSC-Life Training grant (first round), to train and mentor EOSC-RI members under the collaboration name OLS-5 for EOSC-Life. In the simplest terms, EOSC-Life is 13 European life science Research Infrastructures making their data FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable) so that researchers can combine resources from multiple RIs for new research funded through our Open Calls and receive support through the variety of additional services we offer, including alignment with relevant standards and policies (GDPR, etc.).

OLS-5 for Faculty of Applied Sciences/TNW - TU Delft

Under the collaboration name OLS-5 for TNW, Open Life Science has partnered with the Faculty of Applied Sciences through the Faculty Graduate School and the Data Steward, Dr. Esther Plomp at TU Delft. This partnership will offer training and mentoring to interested members from the Faculty of Applied Sciences to join the 5th cohort (OLS-5) individually or in teams. They will have an opportunity to develop Open Science aspects in the projects that they either already have been working on, or want to develop in the near future. Mentors will be preferably selected within their own discipline, as PhD candidates will be eligible for 5 Discipline-related credits for their Doctoral Education Programme.

OLS-5 for Turing

Under the collaboration name OLS-5 for Turing, Open Life Science has partnered with The Turing Way, a project within the Tools, Practices and Systems Research Program in The Alan Turing Institute. This partnership will offer training and mentoring to interested members from Turing and The Turing Way communities to join the fifth cohort (OLS-5) individually or in teams. They will have an opportunity to develop Open Science aspects in the projects that they either already have been working on, or want to develop in the near future. Mentors will be preferably selected from The Alan Turing Institute but there will be a possibility to match projects with the right mentor from the broader cohort. The roles and benefits for the participants and the eligibility of proposed projects will be as described for our main program.

This program will provide a unique opportunity to individuals and teams in these organisations to integrate best practices for open and reproducible research in new or ongoing projects.

Resources

The resources available to the OLS-5 cohort members will facilitate their communication, training, mentoring and learning process during their participation in the program.

Calls

Cohort calls

The full cohort meetings take place every 2 weeks (unless mentioned otherwise) and last for 90 minutes.

During these calls:

  • Organisers/hosts will introduce new topic of the week
  • Speakers will present their work related to the topic of the week
  • Participants will be given group discussion exercises
  • An open Q&A will be run and notes will be co-developed
  • Exercises will be given for the week to be completed before the mentee-mentor meeting

The calls will be hosted online using the Zoom web-conferencing option. A link for the calls will be shared for each meeting separately.

Look up the shared notes for each call linked to the schedule in this website. You will also be updated via email each week by the organisers with additional details to aid your participation.

If you can’t make it to a call:

The call will be recorded and available on the OLS YouTube channel after the call.

If you can not attend most calls during the program due to the time zone incompatibility or other personal obligation, please let the organisers know. If you are unable to communicate with your mentor regularly or do not engage in the program as planned, we may need to evaluate if you are able to finish the program.

Mentor-mentee calls

The Mentor-mentee calls take place every 2 weeks (unless mentioned otherwise) and last for 30 minutes.

During these calls:

  • Mentors help their mentees evaluate their understanding of the new topics
  • Mentees will complete their task assigned at the cohort calls using new skills learned that week
  • Mentors and mentee will review progress together where mentees provide constructive feedback
  • Mentors will connect mentees with other experts and get consulted on their project when needed

Coordinate with your mentor how you manage the notes and assignments for your 1:1 calls.

The online communication options can be agreed upon by the mentor-mentee pairs. A few options to explore are the following:

  • Zoom: 40 mins limit for each call
  • Google hangout: Free for members with google account
  • Skype: Free, download the app
  • Whereby.com: Free option, valid upto 4 participants
  • Jitsi: Free, open source web-based call is possible
  • Whatsapp or other phone-based calls: Only if both mentor and mentee are comfortable with exchanging numbers

If a mentor has to miss a mentee-mentor meeting, please discuss it with your mentee and reschedule your call. If you are unable to make it to any slot together, please find other ways (asynchronous documentation) to interact with your mentee.

If a mentor has to step back from the program for any reason, please communicate with the organisers to identify an alternative for their mentees.

Skill-up calls

In some weeks during which there is not cohort call, we will offer some optional skill-up calls.

The calls will be hosted online using the Zoom web-conferencing option. A link for the calls will be shared for each meeting separately.

Look up the shared notes for each call linked to the schedule in this website. You will also be updated via email each week by the organisers with additional details to aid your participation.

Q&A calls

The Q&A sessions take place in weeks during which there is not cohort call. These calls are optional but highly valuable for enhancing your understanding of the materials discussed in OLS-4 with the help of other participants.

The calls will be hosted online using the Zoom web-conferencing option. A link for the calls will be shared for each meeting separately.

Mentor calls

4 mentor calls will take place during the program.

The calls will be hosted online using the Zoom web-conferencing option. A link for the calls will be shared for each meeting separately.

Speaker Guide

We have a short guide for invited speakers.

Communication channels

Communication within the cohort members

OLS-5 Slack Channel

A dedicated Slack channel has been setup to facilitate real-time as well as asynchronous communication among the all members of the OLS-5 cohort. A personal invitation link will be shared with the participants via an email.

OLS-5 private Google group

Organizers inform participants of the week schedule by email. An archive of all emails can be found on the private OLS-5 Google group.

An invitation is sent to all participants (mentees, mentors, etc) at the beginning of the program. If it is not the case, please contact the team

Communication with members not in the cohort

Twitter

General updates from the program such as new posts, collaborations and relevant retweets will be shared via our official Twitter channel.

Gitter

We have a public Gitter channel that can be used by members of the public contact the OLS team and community.

OLS Google group

Updates regarding new calls for applications, announcements, and final project presentations are posted on the OLS public Google group

Community Participation Guidelines

This project, as part of the Open Life Science community, is committed to providing a welcoming, friendly, and harassment-free environment for everyone to learn and grow by contributing. As a result, we require participants to follow our code of conduct.

This code of conduct outlines our expectations for participants within the community, as well as steps to reporting unacceptable behavior. We are committed to providing a welcoming and inspiring community for all and expect our code of conduct to be honored. Anyone who violates this code of conduct may be banned from the community.

Our open source community strives to:

  • Be friendly and patient.

  • Be welcoming: We strive to be a community that welcomes and supports people of all backgrounds and identities. This includes, but is not limited to members of any race, ethnicity, culture, national origin, colour, immigration status, social and economic class, educational level, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, age, size, family status, political belief, religion, and mental and physical ability.

  • Be considerate: Your work will be used by other people, and you in turn will depend on the work of others. Any decision you take will affect users and colleagues, and you should take those consequences into account when making decisions. Remember that we’re a world-wide community, so you might not be communicating in someone else’s primary language.

  • Be respectful: Not all of us will agree all the time, but disagreement is no excuse for poor behavior and poor manners. We might all experience some frustration now and then, but we cannot allow that frustration to turn into a personal attack. It’s important to remember that a community where people feel uncomfortable or threatened is not a productive one.

  • Be careful in the words that we choose: We are a community of professionals, and we conduct ourselves professionally. Be kind to others. Do not insult or put down other participants. Harassment and other exclusionary behavior aren’t acceptable. This includes, but is not limited to: Violent threats or language directed against another person, Discriminatory jokes and language, Posting sexually explicit or violent material, Posting (or threatening to post) other people’s personally identifying information (“doxing”), Personal insults, especially those using racist or sexist terms, Unwelcome sexual attention, Advocating for, or encouraging, any of the above behavior, Repeated harassment of others. In general, if someone asks you to stop, then stop.

  • Try to understand why we disagree: Disagreements, both social and technical, happen all the time. It is important that we resolve disagreements and differing views constructively. Remember that we’re different. Diversity contributes to the strength of our community, which is composed of people from a wide range of backgrounds. Different people have different perspectives on issues. Being unable to understand why someone holds a viewpoint doesn’t mean that they’re wrong. Don’t forget that it is human to err and blaming each other doesn’t get us anywhere. Instead, focus on helping to resolve issues and learning from mistakes.

Diversity Statement

We encourage everyone to participate and are committed to building a community for all. Although we will fail at times, we seek to treat everyone both as fairly and equally as possible. Whenever a participant has made a mistake, we expect them to take responsibility for it. If someone has been harmed or offended, it is our responsibility to listen carefully and respectfully, and do our best to right the wrong.

Although this list cannot be exhaustive, we explicitly honor diversity in age, gender, gender identity or expression, culture, ethnicity, language, national origin, political beliefs, profession, race, religion, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, and technical ability. We will not tolerate discrimination based on any of the protected characteristics above, including participants with disabilities.

Reporting Issues

If you experience or witness unacceptable behavior, or have any other concerns, please report it by contacting the organisers - Bérénice, Malvika and Yo. (team@we-are-ols.org).

To report an issue involving one of the members, please email one of the members individually (berenice@we-are-ols.org, malvika@we-are-ols.org, yo@we-are-ols.org).

All reports will be handled with discretion. In your report please include:

  • Your contact information.

  • Names (real, nicknames, or pseudonyms) of any individuals involved. If there are additional witnesses, please include them as well. Your account of what occurred, and if you believe the incident is ongoing. If there is a publicly available record (e.g. a mailing list archive or a public IRC logger), please include a link.

  • Any additional information that may be helpful.

After filing a report, a representative will contact you personally, review the incident, follow up with any additional questions, and make a decision as to how to respond. If the person who is harassing you is part of the response team, they will recuse themselves from handling your incident. If the complaint originates from a member of the response team, it will be handled by a different member of the response team. We will respect confidentiality requests for the purpose of protecting victims of abuse.

Attribution & Acknowledgements

This code of conduct is based on the Open Code of Conduct from the TODOGroup.