Community Description
The Data-Sharing Community was formed to help HRA membership who are interested in navigating the data-sharing ecosystem. The group facilitated sessions, collected and disseminated information and resources and served as a thought-partnership community for HRA membership. The learning agenda included the items below which have now been incorporated into the agenda of the Open Science Learning Community.
- Inform HRA members about the issues and leading thinking surrounding data sharing.
- Help members in their decision-making processes regarding the creation of data sharing policies.
- Support HRA members with resources and insights as they develop and implement data-sharing policies.
The Data Sharing Community was a subgroup of the Open Science Community.
The Key Activities this group has undertaken to achieve the above aims are:
- Providing access to leaders (via hosting meetings and webinars) in the data-sharing ecosystem
- Sourcing learning topics from HRA membership
- Collecting and disseminating robust data-sharing policies as well as organization checklists for creating a policy
- Providing the environment for thought-partnership and coordinate shared services among members, when appropriate
- Collaborating with federal and other non-federal research funding institutions on data-sharing policy
Other activities and events include:
Hosting sessions at Members Meeting to identify the high level processes necessary to create and implement data sharing policies.
Developing a road map to facilitate HRA Members’ development of their own policies.
Quarterly webinars about data sharing topics:
Other potential discussion topics include:
- how to advocate for data-sharing within your organization and the value of a data-sharing policy
- evaluating data-sharing plans and monitoring compliance to a data-sharing policy
- vetting/selecting/learning about data-sharing repositories
- incentivizing data-sharing for the research community
Co-Chairs
The Data Sharing Learning Community has been incorporated into the Open Science Learning Community.