datacarpentry/rr-intro

Name: rr-intro

Owner: Data Carpentry

Description: Introduction materials for Reproducible Research Curriculum

Created: 2014-12-11 14:25:39.0

Updated: 2017-11-10 09:08:58.0

Pushed: 2017-07-03 19:01:41.0

Homepage: http://www.datacarpentry.org/rr-intro/

Size: 5761

Language: HTML

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README

rr-intro

Lesson synopsis:

In this session we will start by reviewing case studies of (lack of) reproducibility gone wrong. Then participants will work on two reproducibility exercises: first a simple data manipulation and analysis exercise using any software they generally work with and then the same exercise (and extensions to it) using RMarkdown in RStudio as a better alternative, highlighting how this approach makes documentation, organization, automation, and dissemination easier.

Syllabus:
Goals:

At the beginning of this session, participants should be able to

At the end of the session students will be able to

The specific problems to be addressed in each session are as follows:

The first half of the intro session is language agnostic. If a workshop uses programming language other than R, only intro-02 will need to be modified.

Pre-workshop:

Participants install R + RStudio.

See email template.

First half (01):

See instructor notes (intro-01-instr-notes.Rmd) for details.

Second half (02):

See instructor notes (intro-02-instr-notes.Rmd) for details.

Data attribution
People and credits

This lesson was first created at the 1. Reproducible Science Curriculum Hackathon. The corresponding author is Mine Çetinkaya-Rundel (@mine-cetinkaya-rundel). See the commit log for other contributors.

Please post feedback and issues with the lesson on the repository's issue tracker. For instructor questions about teaching this lesson, you can also contact the corresponding author directly.


This work is supported by the National Institutes of Health's National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, Grant Number U24TR002306. This work is solely the responsibility of the creators and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.