Abstract

To foster responsible research and innovation, research communities, institutions, and funders are shifting their practices and requirements towards Open Science. Open Science skills are becoming increasingly essential for researchers. Indeed general awareness of Open Science has grown among EU researchers, but the practical adoption can be further improved. Recognizing a gap between the needed and the provided training offer, the FOSTER project offers practical guidance and training to help researchers learn how to open up their research within a particular domain or research environment. Aiming for a sustainable approach, FOSTER focused on strengthening the Open Science training capacity by establishing and supporting a community of trainers. The creation of an Open Science training handbook was a first step towards bringing together trainers to share their experiences and to create an open and living knowledge resource. A subsequent series of train-the-trainer bootcamps helped trainers to find inspiration, improve their skills and to intensify exchange within a peer group. Four trainers, who attended one of the bootcamps, contributed a case study on their experiences and how they rolled out Open Science training within their own institutions. On its platform the project provides a range of online courses and resources to learn about key Open Science topics. FOSTER awards users gamification badges when completing courses in order to provide incentives and rewards, and to spur them on to even greater achievements in learning. The paper at hand describes FOSTER Plus’ training strategies, shares the lessons learnt and provides guidance on how to reuse the project’s materials and training approaches.

Highlights

  • The shift towards Open Science has gained significant momentum through support from funders and policy makers in the European Research Area

  • The launch of “Plan S” in September 2018, declaring Open Access to be the standard for scholarly publishing by 2021, shows a clear intention to accelerate the practical implementation of Open Science

  • Whilst the national Open Science communities managed to translate the handbook without any difficulties and the successful releases can be interpreted as a strong indication of the need for support in different languages, the project experienced difficulties in fully monitoring how many people used the handbook

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Summary

Introduction

The shift towards Open Science has gained significant momentum through support from funders and policy makers in the European Research Area. Academia needs to be aware and trained to implement policies such as Plan S in research workflows. The team developed learning objectives, defined the term Open Science and collected training materials on the FOSTER portal from 125 supported events. From 2014 to 2016, 5,258 persons participated in the training events organised by the FOSTER project (cf FOSTER infographic, see Figure 1). These high numbers demonstrate a strong interest in organizing Open Science training and a great need for training from the audience’s side. The paper at hand intends to present the FOSTER Plus’ training strategies, provide guidance for re-using the project’s materials and share the lessons we learnt

Training the Trainers to Build Capacity
A Handbook for Open Science Training
Book Sprint
The Handbook
Lessons Learnt
Conclusion and Impact
Recommendations on Training Trainers on Open Science
Three-Day Open Science Trainer Bootcamp
One-day Open Science Trainer Bootcamps
Facilitating Open Science Practices
FOSTER Resources for Open Science Trainers
Online Courses
Learning Management System
An Open Science Toolkit
Incentivising Open Science Training
Conclusion
Full Text
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