The Carpentries builds global capacity in essential data and computational skills for conducting efficient, open, and reproducible research. We train and foster an active, inclusive, diverse community of learners and instructors that promotes and models the importance of software and data in research. We collaboratively develop openly-available lessons and deliver these lessons using evidence-based teaching practices. The Carpentries is comprised of three distinct lesson programs: Software Carpentry, Data Carpentry, and Library Carpentry. Together, they comprise communities of volunteer researchers, educators, and more who develop lessons and teach intensive one to two day workshops on basic computing and data skills for researchers. This s...
The Carpentries teaches software and data skills to researchers and librarians all over the world. O...
A short overview of The Carpentries initiative, how they operate and collaboratively develop, mainta...
Nearly all academics use research software and 69% say their research wouldn’t be practical without ...
In July 1998, Los Alamos National Laboratory hosted the very first Carpentries course, led by John R...
Funding bodies, campus initiatives, and professional associations have recently placed an increasing...
<p>In many domains the rapid generation of large amounts of data is fundamentally changing how resea...
The Cartpentries is a non-profit, fiscally-sponsored project whose aims are to support training in e...
The expanding availability of access to data about museum specimens, species occurrences, trait data...
Library Carpentry is an open education volunteer network and lesson organization dedicated to teachi...
Presentation of The Carpentries by Kristina Hettne, for the Health-RI FAIR data stewards basics cour...
Library Carpentry is a growing community of instructors and lesson developers whose mission is to te...
Software Carpentry is a non-profit volunteer organization that was established in 1998 to teach scie...
Today's researchers are challenged to master an ever-expanding and interlinked set of information an...
The Carpentries is an international organisation which teaches data and software skills to researche...
This presentation discussed the development of the New England Software Carpentry Library Consortium...
The Carpentries teaches software and data skills to researchers and librarians all over the world. O...
A short overview of The Carpentries initiative, how they operate and collaboratively develop, mainta...
Nearly all academics use research software and 69% say their research wouldn’t be practical without ...
In July 1998, Los Alamos National Laboratory hosted the very first Carpentries course, led by John R...
Funding bodies, campus initiatives, and professional associations have recently placed an increasing...
<p>In many domains the rapid generation of large amounts of data is fundamentally changing how resea...
The Cartpentries is a non-profit, fiscally-sponsored project whose aims are to support training in e...
The expanding availability of access to data about museum specimens, species occurrences, trait data...
Library Carpentry is an open education volunteer network and lesson organization dedicated to teachi...
Presentation of The Carpentries by Kristina Hettne, for the Health-RI FAIR data stewards basics cour...
Library Carpentry is a growing community of instructors and lesson developers whose mission is to te...
Software Carpentry is a non-profit volunteer organization that was established in 1998 to teach scie...
Today's researchers are challenged to master an ever-expanding and interlinked set of information an...
The Carpentries is an international organisation which teaches data and software skills to researche...
This presentation discussed the development of the New England Software Carpentry Library Consortium...
The Carpentries teaches software and data skills to researchers and librarians all over the world. O...
A short overview of The Carpentries initiative, how they operate and collaboratively develop, mainta...
Nearly all academics use research software and 69% say their research wouldn’t be practical without ...