These slides were presented on 7 November 2021 as part of the Bioinformatics Education Special Track at the InCoB 2021 Conference. The presentation: Outlines the ten simple rules for making training materials FAIR which were developed by the ELIXIR FAIR Training Focus Group. Describes more recent efforts to gather feedback and develop practical guidance on putting the 10 simple rules into practice. Outlines the approach taken by Australian BioCommons to apply the FAIR principles to training materials. This presentation was given on behalf of the global FAIR Training Community. References: 10 simple rules paper: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007854 ELIXIR Webinar on the 10 Simple Rules: https://elixir-europe.org/events/eli...
Bioinformatics training evolved from a luxury activity in the 1980s into a widely recognised need in...
This paper considers what makes a short course in bioinformatics successful. In today’s research env...
Gurwitz KT, Singh Gaur P, Bellis LJ, et al. A framework to assess the quality and impact of bioinfor...
This presentation took place during a session at the eResearch Australasia 2021 Conference 11-15 Oct...
A hands-on self-learning handbook on how to FAIRify training materials was designed, created, implem...
Sharing data has become common practice around the globe, and training is part of this trend. This P...
Providing bioinformatics training to help life science researchers effectively work with ELIXIR reso...
Author summaryEverything we do today is becoming more and more reliant on the use of computers. The ...
Presentation given at the Open Science Zurich meeting on 04 March 2021. SIB resources, SIB Training,...
ELIXIR is an intergovernmental organization that brings together life science resources across Europ...
peer reviewedEverything we do today is becoming more and more reliant on the use of computers. The f...
This record includes training materials associated with the Australian BioCommons/Melbourne Genomics...
The learning objective of the presentation is to understand FAIR principles by distinguishing betwee...
This short talk was given on October 11, 2022 at the COBLET2022 event, the 1st Colloquium on Bioinfo...
Poster presented at the BioSB Conference, 2-3 April 2019, Lunteren (https://www.aanmelder.nl/biosb20...
Bioinformatics training evolved from a luxury activity in the 1980s into a widely recognised need in...
This paper considers what makes a short course in bioinformatics successful. In today’s research env...
Gurwitz KT, Singh Gaur P, Bellis LJ, et al. A framework to assess the quality and impact of bioinfor...
This presentation took place during a session at the eResearch Australasia 2021 Conference 11-15 Oct...
A hands-on self-learning handbook on how to FAIRify training materials was designed, created, implem...
Sharing data has become common practice around the globe, and training is part of this trend. This P...
Providing bioinformatics training to help life science researchers effectively work with ELIXIR reso...
Author summaryEverything we do today is becoming more and more reliant on the use of computers. The ...
Presentation given at the Open Science Zurich meeting on 04 March 2021. SIB resources, SIB Training,...
ELIXIR is an intergovernmental organization that brings together life science resources across Europ...
peer reviewedEverything we do today is becoming more and more reliant on the use of computers. The f...
This record includes training materials associated with the Australian BioCommons/Melbourne Genomics...
The learning objective of the presentation is to understand FAIR principles by distinguishing betwee...
This short talk was given on October 11, 2022 at the COBLET2022 event, the 1st Colloquium on Bioinfo...
Poster presented at the BioSB Conference, 2-3 April 2019, Lunteren (https://www.aanmelder.nl/biosb20...
Bioinformatics training evolved from a luxury activity in the 1980s into a widely recognised need in...
This paper considers what makes a short course in bioinformatics successful. In today’s research env...
Gurwitz KT, Singh Gaur P, Bellis LJ, et al. A framework to assess the quality and impact of bioinfor...