Closed acocac closed 2 months ago
@acocac Thank you for your contribution. This is truly an epic project that your community has created here.
I was already familiar with this project, but a long time ago we decided to move the very good courses and tutorials to the Education section of this project, where Environmental Data Science book is already listed, which is unfortunately a different list. We did this to make it easier for newcomers to find entry-level projects among the hundreds of expert-level open source projects. For various reasons, we are considering moving the education projects to the main list, but this has not yet happened. One reason to all education content to the main list is that I have noticed that people simply overlook the education section.
It would be great to get your feedback on this @acocac, as a user. Does it make sense to create a "Sustainable Education" subsection, or "Education for Sustainable Development" as the UN calls it, under "Sustainable Development" section with all the projects from the education list? @andrew @RichardLitt @joshhopkins
This is truly a great resource. However, at the risk of becoming noisy, I think educational resources should remain seperate from tooling.
I don't see a reason not to have a longer Markdown list with an education section. I don't know how many eyes are on the education.md file.
@Ly0n apologies, it was my bad that I didn't double check the education section. I suggest increasing the awareness of the educational resources by including them in the Climate Triage portal. There's a great opportunity to promote all educational resources that are complementary to the curated list of tools. Indeed, I added the EDS book because it wasn't listed in the Triage.
I think the Education for Sustainable Development makes sense. I am a topic editor for JOSE, and there are other great examples of educational resources for environmental sustainability (see for example 1.
@joshhopkins can you expand on what you mean by noisy? Please be aware some educational resources such as Project Pythia and EDS book have a strong investment in the community and maximise open source infrastructure to increase the visibility of open research (data, software, pipelines) in environmental sustainability. Project Pythia has solid developments for scheduling and testing the health of its foundational materials and cookbooks.
@acocac I definitely appreciate your view on this. I mean potentially noisy, in that educational resources are so vast, that without applying normative judgments there is a risk of diluting this directory. Of course, there is often overlap between documentation and tooling, but in general, I think there should be some separation between the two with a slightly different acceptance criteria.
@acocac I definitely appreciate your view on this. I mean potentially noisey, in that educational resources are so vast, that without applying normative judgments there is a risk of diluting this directory. Of course, there is often overlap between documentation and tooling, but in general, I think there should be some separation between the two with a slightly different acceptance criteria.
@joshhopkins thanks for elaborating your points on this. There's then a clear opportunity for a dedicated initiative tracking progress and foster collaboration on educational-focused open source resources in environmental sustainability.
👏 The climate triage is an amazing portal, I hope others can extend it to other domains!
We have to decide at the next community meeting how to deal with the educational section. Until then, I don't see a problem with including these projects on both lists. So it will also appear on ClimateTriage.
Just a small side note. This was repo #2000 we listed based on ecosyste.ms data. :partying_face: :balloon: :rocket:
Environmental Data Science book
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