{"id":1226,"date":"2013-06-07T18:43:45","date_gmt":"2013-06-07T18:43:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/notebooks.dataone.org\/?p=1226"},"modified":"2013-06-07T18:44:58","modified_gmt":"2013-06-07T18:44:58","slug":"data-policy-classification","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/notebooks.dataone.org\/ppsr-data-policies\/data-policy-classification\/","title":{"rendered":"Data policy classification"},"content":{"rendered":"
I know this probably won’t fascinate anyone except me, but I spent most of week 2 developing a classification schema for understanding citizen science data policy. \u00a0Developing a classification scheme was necessary because it’s important to have a *real* metric to use when evaluating different policies, instead of comparing one policy to another in an ad hoc manor. This turned out to be much more of an undertaking than I initially thought (I defend qualitative research as “rigorous” all the time, but forget exactly how<\/em> rigorous it really is until it’s time for me to engage with some data). \u00a0The resulting schema is essential a 12-page list.<\/p>\n With apologies for WordPress formatting, here are the top level categories, which should give you a good idea about how citizen science\/ PPSR data policy is generally structured:<\/p>\n Next week I get to validate! \u00a0I’ll be testing my schema with projects not used in the initial construction, making my wonderful mentor code some projects with me to generate inter-rater reliability, and testing out with data policies outside of the PPSR realm– namely, that of Wikipedia, Facebook, and Data.gov (for a start).<\/p>\n Non-project highlights include eating at Moosewood, the premier vegetarian restaurant in the world.<\/p>\n Next week I promise you a list of the best data policies in PPSR.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" I know this probably won’t fascinate anyone except me, but I spent most of week 2 developing a classification schema for understanding citizen science data policy. \u00a0Developing a classification scheme was necessary because it’s important to have a *real* metric to use when evaluating different policies, instead of comparing one Continue reading Data policy classification<\/span>\n