Outbreaks, Break-outs and Break-times: Creating Caring Online Workshops
How can online workshops be productive, engaging, caring and fun? How can researchers creatively adapt to a 'virtual normal' and develop caring and co-operative ways of working.
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How can online workshops be productive, engaging, caring and fun? How can researchers creatively adapt to a 'virtual normal' and develop caring and co-operative ways of working.
As scientists, we try to make sure our research is rigorous so that we can avoid costly errors. We should take the same approach to tackle issues in research culture, says Professor Christopher Jackson.
Just 15% of professors at Eindhoven University of Technology were women until it introduced a radical new scheme.
Over 150 Georgia State University faculty members signed an open letter to the school's president, Mark Becker, regarding a greater push for diversity and inclusion within its faculty.
New England Journal of Medicine and Lancet peer reviewers did not see raw data behind findings before publication.
Institute ends negotiations for a new journals contract in the absence of a proposal aligning with the MIT Framework for Publisher Contracts.
Don't blame last week's journal retractions on the scary pace of the pandemic. "Once-in-a-lifetime" scandals like this seem to happen all the time.
Nearly three-quarters of UK universities slipped down while Asian institutions rose.
cOAlition S announces that the tender was awarded to a consortium coordinated by OPERAS.
IBM is also advocating for police reform.
Nature commits to working to end anti-Black practices in research.
Academics and some scientific organizations will stop research activities on 10 June to reflect and take action on systemic inequalities in science.
SARS-CoV-2 presents an unprecedented international challenge, but it will not be the last such threat. In this article, the authors argue that the world needs to be much better prepared to rapidly detect, define and defeat future pandemics.
Both hashtags trended on social media over the weekend and speak to pervasive racial inequity.
The decision comes as new details emerge in the scandal that has ignited a firestorm of controversy in the scientific community.
More than 140 scientists funded by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative urged Mark Zuckerberg to enforce stricter policies around the spread of misinformation and incitements to violence.
STAT asked 11 experts in infectious disease, epidemiology, and pandemic preparedness how to avoid the mistakes of the coronavirus response this spring.
Surgisphere, whose employees appear to include a sci-fi writer and adult content model, provided database behind Lancet and New England Journal of Medicine hydroxychloroquine studies.
The push for rapid and open publishing could take off - although financial pressures lie ahead: part 4 in a series on science after the pandemic.
We are pleased to announce the next OASPA webinar which will explore recent steps to increase efficiency and speed in the publication of COVID-19 research (Wednesday 24th June 2020, 4.00 pm Central European Time).
High-level politician suggests academy deserves retribution for publishing unwelcome COVID-19 estimates.
It's not only about what's happening right now. Things need to change for good.
Virtual meetings are becoming the norm under COVID-19 and winning over many researchers: part 3 in a series on science after the pandemic.
With student enrolment projected to fall, some US and UK institutions have halted recruitment.