Library Partners on Data Tool

A group of major research institutions is partnering to develop a flexible online tool to help researchers generate data management plans.  This effort is in response to demands from funding agencies, such as the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH), that researchers plan for managing their research data.

The partners in this project include the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the University of California Curation Center (UC3) at the California Digital Library, the UCLA Library, the UCSD Libraries, the Smithsonian Institution, the University of Virginia Library, DataONE, and the United Kingdom’s Digital Curation Centre (DCC).

By joining forces, the partners expect to consolidate expertise and reduce costs in addressing data management needs.  The primary goal of the partnership is to simplify the process of creating plans while increasing the quality of decisions made by funders to pre-define policies and infrastructures that support research activities. University Librarian Paula Kaufman stated, “Illinois researchers will directly benefit from this tool to ease the development of data management plans.  We are excited about this opportunity to further extend our services in data stewardship and management.”

The tool for generating data management plans (DMP) will be based on DMP Online, a software tool developed by the DCC and designed to accommodate different funder requirements; this function will be tested by tailoring it to the requirements of U.S. research funding agencies and the institutions they fund.  It will be publicly available, allowing researchers at all institutions to initiate a data management plan quickly and provide answers to various data management questions relating to their research, such as how data will be documented throughout the research project and made available for public use and potential secondary uses, how data quality will be assured, data backup procedures, and preservation plans.  The tool will make the entire process easier, less expensive, and more consistent in moving research data management forward at the national and international levels.  It will also aid institutions in identifying associated costs and in future resource planning.  The new version of the DMP is expected to be available within the next several months.

Kevin Ashley, DCC director, stated, “Research is an international activity, and data management planning is also international in scope. Funders around the world already require such plans with grant applications or as a condition of funding; many more are planning to do so. The DCC is pleased to be part of this work to develop planning tools that also have international utility and relevance.”

In fiscal year 2010, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign received nearly $179.5 million from NSF alone through more than 400 grants ranging from $3,000 to $90 million.  “The potential impact of the data management requirements on researchers is enormous,” said Kaufman.

Andrew Alleyne, Ralph M. & Catherine V. Fisher Professor of Engineering and Associate Dean for Research at the College of Engineering, states: “With the help of the University of Illinois Library, several of our College of Engineering faculty were able to put together a strong and comprehensive data management plan for our NSF proposals.  The online DMP tool will provide a great service to our faculty by allowing them to seamlessly and easily build data management plans for grant proposals.”

The focus of the Office of the Chief Information Officer (CIO) is to provide campus-wide IT strategies that will contribute to the success of the university as an intellectual community and facilitate pre-eminence in research, education, and outreach.  For more information, please visit www.cio.illinois.edu/ .

Do you have a story you’d like added to the Library News & Events? If so, please contact Heather Murphy ( hmurphy@illinois.edu ).

Grant Awarded to Mortenson Center

The Mortenson Center for International Library Programs at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library has received a grant from the Elsevier Foundation to assess the need for professional development programs for academic librarians in South Korea and Taiwan.

To carry this out, Mortenson Center staff visited librarians in South Korea and Taiwan in December 2010 to determine the librarians’ highest training priorities and to understand their learning styles.  The visit will provide the insight necessary for the Mortenson Center to develop and deliver future training programs in these countries.

The Mortenson Center for International Library Programs seeks to strengthen international ties among libraries and librarians worldwide for the promotion of international education, understanding, and peace.  Over 900 librarians from more than 90 countries have participated in its professional development programs.  For more information, visit www.library.illinois.edu/mortenson/ .

The Elsevier Foundation has awarded over 60 grants worth millions of dollars to non-profit organizations focusing on the world’s libraries, nurse faculty and women scholars during their early and mid-careers.  Founded in 2002, it is funded by Elsevier, a leading global publisher of scientific, technical and medical information products and services.  For more information, visit www.elsevierfoundation.org .

Do you have a story you’d like added to the Library News & Events? If so, please contact Heather Murphy ( hmurphy@illinois.edu ).