Update from the Research Data Management Team

In 2014, support for data ranked as one of the top trends in academic libraries: “Increased emphasis on open data, data-plan management, and ‘big data’ research are creating the impetus for academic institutions from colleges to research universities to develop and deploy new initiatives, service units, and resources to meet scholarly needs at various stages of the research process” (ACRL Research Planning and Review Committee). At Rice, the Research Data Management Team (RDMT) is developing strategies and services to assist researchers in managing their data. This informal working group includes members from Fondren, the Office of Information Technology and the Ken Kennedy Institute for Information Technology, consulting with other stakeholders as needed. RDMT seeks to understand local needs and emerging best practices around research data and to facilitate collaborations to meet these needs, including through infrastructure development, training and consultation.

Recently the RDMT prepared a report that describes data management needs at Rice, such as easy-to-use, well-supported data storage, training in best practices for data management (particularly for graduate students), and support in writing data management plans (especially given funders’ increasing emphasis on them). A small working group is now being assembled that will develop a more specific proposal for providing data management infrastructure and services at Rice, building on current activities.

The RDMT offers consultation services for researchers developing data management plans, which most federal funding agencies require or will soon require. As they create their data management plans, Rice researchers can use the web-based templates provided by DMPTool; they can log in using their netids and passwords.

To assist researchers in writing effective plans and in better managing their data, the RDMT is offering several workshops during the fall semester, including:

Fondren staff are welcome to sign up for the first two workshops; the last one is reserved for graduate students.

Last year the RDMT worked on a small pilot project to bring a dataset into the Rice Digital Scholarship Archive, in the process developing a metadata profile and tackling questions about scope and workflow. We hope to expand our pilot project to share small, finalized datasets through the Rice Digital Scholarship Archive. If you know of good faculty partners for such a project, please contact Lisa Spiro.

As the RDMT develops its services and resources, we welcome help spreading the word about our work, as well as input on how best to support researchers in managing their research data.

Fondren at O-Week 2015 Academic Fair

Fondren Library was invited to participate in Rice’s O-Week 2015 Academic Fair. Held at the Rec Center the afternoon of Tuesday, August 18, the fair was an opportunity for new students to learn about different academic offerings on campus. Several library employees took turns staffing the table, providing materials and answering questions about the library’s many services and collections. Here, an academic fair participant proudly displays one of the new Fondren-Library-branded water bottles, which were distributed to all freshman as part of an O-Week welcome packet.

CMACS Water Bottle

New at the Kelley Center

Spring and summer have been a busy time for the Kelley Center for Government Information, Data and Geospatial Services staff as will be the fall. Kathy Weimer, whom we welcomed as department head in January, is guiding the Kelley Center to expand its offerings related to data services and data management. You can learn more about Kathy from an article on page 7 of the Spring 2015 edition of News From Fondren.

Planning and carrying out new opportunities for intellectual property training has also been the focus of the department. In addition to our regular monthly patent search classes, on May 19 Michael Hydorn and Daphne Joseph from the Patent and Trademark Resource Center (PTRC) of the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), came to Fondren to offer patent and trademark search training to those at Rice and from the greater Houston Area. As part of the event attended by around 100 people, representatives from local organizations who assist with intellectual property and business procedures described their services. Also, after months of planning, Rice patents became available in the Digital Scholarship Archive  this summer creating a much easier and more complete way of finding them and collocating patents with a researcher’s other scholarly body of work. Members of the group making this happen included: Linda Spiro and Siu Min Yu, Government Information Librarians; Scott Carlson, Metadata Coordinator; Monica Rivero, Digital Curation Coordinator; Kathy Weimer, Head, Kelley Center for Government Information, Data and Geospatial Services; Lisa Spiro, Executive Director of Digital Scholarship Services; and Shannon Kipphut-Smith, Scholarly Communications Liaison. On August 7 the department hosted a celebration to highlight the availability of Rice patents in the repository and the 225th anniversary of the first United States patent. Additionally, on September 16 from 1:30-3:00 pm Craig Morris, Educational Outreach Attorney for Trademarks at the USPTO, will speak in the Kyle Morrow Room in a free program entitled Trademark Basics: What Every Small Business Should Know Now Not Later.

With the advent of Fondren’s new web pages, content that was available on our government web pages on the old site is in the process of being moved to LibGuides. If you are having trouble locating information, please ask at the government information desk or call 713-348-5483.

Astrodome Memories Oral History and Scanning Event (2)

Woodson Research Center staff Amanda Focke and Dara Flinn participated with other local archives in the Astrodome Memories oral history and memorabilia scanning event on Saturday morning, which brought members of the community to the Houston Public Library’s historic Julia Ideson Building to share wonderful stories of life in the Astrodome. Houstonians fully used all six scanning stations, the photography station for 3D and oversize objects, and the two oral history stations during the four-hour event, and made time to get to know each other’s stories as well. The event provided a reunion of sorts for two of the original Spacettes, the women charged with ushering guests in the dome. Betty Court Laney brought photos while Emily Hammond brought her 1965 gold lamé uniform, including blue boots and Astrodome-shaped pill box hat. Other fans brought photos and memorabilia of sporting events, the rodeo, and concerts held in the dome. Donald Bond brought photos and ephemera related to his father Walter Bond, who played for the Colt .45’s (later the Astros) baseball team.

Spacette Reunion

Spacette Reunion

Donald Bond with photo of Walter Bond

Donald Bond with photo of Walter Bond

Future events will be announced over the next year, and the Astrodome Memories Project staff will be happy to scan your memorabilia and record your oral history by appointment. The Astrodome Memories site can be found here:

http://www.astrodomememories.org/