DYR

From CommunityData


Do Your Research (DYR) is a weekly workshop hosted by the Community Data Science Collective at UW that is focused on providing a venue for feedback on in-progress research projects focused on the online communities, social media, and cooperative work.

Participants present research-in-progress and provide feedback, accountability, and support to each other. Our focus is to support one another in our research projects. Our topical scope is defined by the interests of the people who show up and participate although our general focus is empirical social scientific research into social media, online communities, collective action, organizations, collaboration, and related topics. We embrace a wide range of methods.

If you have questions about DYR, you should contact Kaylea Champion, Wm Salt Hale or Nate TeBlunthuis.

Get connected/involved

We will are currently planning to meet over the summer at a time and place yet to be determined. Fill out the When is good poll to help us choose a time.

To get additional information about the workshop, contact one of the organizers (Kaylea, Salt, Nate) or subscribe to our email list: dyr-uw@communitydata.cc via https://communitydata.cc/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dyr-uw

Format and expectations

  • For each meeting, one person (the presenter) will circulate a document related to their current research projects. This will typically be a draft of a paper but could also be a paper along with reviews, an outline, proposal, or "one-pager" for a new research project, a grant proposal, or a draft of a presentations. We welcome projects in any stage of development where the group will be able to provide meaningful and actionable feedback.
  • We ask that presenters who are circulating written work do so no less than 1 full "business day" prior to the meeting.
  • We expect that everybody attending the meeting will have carefully read document circulated before hand. Although clarifications are welcome, the plan is that there will be no presentations (unless, of course, somebody is looking for feedback on a presentation they hope to give).
  • DYR is a research community. What this means is that we ask that all attendees to commit to participating regularly (i.e., all or most weeks in a given quarter) and that it's not really a place for one-off or infrequent attendees unless they're invited by the presentor. In particular, we expect that the folks presenting work will all be regulars and that presentations will rotate among these regulars.


Schedule