Your final product rubric is as follows:
(25 total points)
10 points - In class on March 11, present your work including a) the scientific question you asked, b) how you approached the analyses, c) your primary results (the answer to the question asked), and d) what the next steps would be. This can be a Rmarkdown presentation, Jupyter Presentation, Google Slides, or anything that can be viewed on the web (does not require local download)
15 points - Methods and Results Section reflecting your work written in a manner where someone else could reproduce. This can be done in markdown, Rmarkdown, or Google Docs. Draft can be submitted March 12 (optional), and feedback will be provided. Final document is due March 18.
These documents need to be readily accessible via your Readme.md
For this week go ahead and revise your Readme such that it points to these two items. The items can be blank / scarce this week.
Add the url to your repo below once it has been edited.
Your final product rubric is as follows: (25 total points)
10 points - In class on March 11, present your work including a) the scientific question you asked, b) how you approached the analyses, c) your primary results (the answer to the question asked), and d) what the next steps would be. This can be a Rmarkdown presentation, Jupyter Presentation, Google Slides, or anything that can be viewed on the web (does not require local download)
15 points - Methods and Results Section reflecting your work written in a manner where someone else could reproduce. This can be done in markdown, Rmarkdown, or Google Docs. Draft can be submitted March 12 (optional), and feedback will be provided. Final document is due March 18.
These documents need to be readily accessible via your Readme.md For this week go ahead and revise your Readme such that it points to these two items. The items can be blank / scarce this week. Add the url to your repo below once it has been edited.