Inclusive Data Research Skills for Arts and Humanities

Welcome
The DAReS project aims to develop an inclusive data and digital skills curriculum for the arts and humanities, which can inform a scalable regional or national pilot. This Hackathon is part of the DAReS project, funded by the AHRC as part of the IDAH Digital Skills Network, lead by the London College of Communication, University of the Arts London, with the Creative Computing Institute, King’s College London, Leeds University, Roehampton University, and partners, CRAC/Vitae and Wikimedia UK.

Resources for contributors

 * /How to create an account/


 * /What is Wikibooks/


 * /How to add a chapter/


 * The outreach dashboard


 * /Guidance on accessibility and good practice/


 * /Agenda for the Day/

About the Project

 * /About the DAReS project/
 * /Project Team/
 * /DAReS Codesigners/
 * /Contributors/
 * Self-Sustaining Community of Researchers

DAReS Hackathon Code of Conduct

 * /Purpose, values, code and consequences/

Session 1: Data skills: What works for arts and humanities?

 * /What counts as data?/
 * /Data Visualization/
 * /Data practices/

Session 2: Data epistemologies and decolonising data tools and skills

 * /Introductory context: How we came to data epistemologies and decolonial approaches/
 * Deconstructing Data Methods and Decolonising Approaches
 * Data Agencies
 * Data Inequalities and Power

Session 3: Hacking the Research Journey

 * /What is the research journey?/
 * /What kinds of research can data-oriented arts and humanities researchers do and what are the possible challenges?/
 * /What should a research goal be?/
 * /Who can potential collaborators, partners and team be?/
 * /How do you get funding?/

Outreach dashboard
This book was collaboratively written by members of the DAReS project and attendees at the hackathon on 26 January 2024. A list of contributors can be found on the outreach dashboard.

Contributors Included:

Karen Hanrahan

Claire Carroll