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This repository has been archived by the owner on Apr 29, 2022. It is now read-only.

PREreview/peer-review-mentoring-program.github.io

 
 

PREreview Peer Review Mentoring Program

Sharing. Connecting. Empowering

Welcome!

First and foremost, Welcome! 🎉 Willkommen! 🎊 Bienvenue! 🙏 सुस्वागत (Suswagat)🎈🎈🎈

This document (the README file) is a hub to give you some information about the project. Jump straight to one of the sections below, or just scroll down to find out more.

What are we doing?

We are working to build a free cohort-based mentoring program for researchers interested in learning about the nuts and bolts of scholarly peer review in a dynamic, respectful, and global settings. Even though this program is reserach topic agnostic, it may have a bias towards life science fields.

Our goal is to support early-career researchers (i.e., Master's level students and above in the academic track) by sharing aggregated knowledge about scholarly peer review, connecting them to peers and other stakeholders in the community, and empowering them to become constructive members of the scientific community.

This program is part of an open project called PREreview whose mission at is to bring more diversity to scholarly peer review by supporting and empowering community of researchers, particularly those at early stages of their career, to review preprints. We created a free and open web platform in which anyone with an ORCID iD can provide constructive feedback to preprints.

Who are we?

First and foremost, we are a team of women scientists dedicated to making academia a diverse and inclusive space.

We are also advocate for open practices and are involved in several open commutities such as ASAPbio Ambassadors, Mozilla Open Leaders, eLIFE Ambassadors, and OpenCon.

What do we need?

You! In whatever way you can help.

We need expertise in peer review (both traditional and innovative), diversity and inclusion, open-science, training, mentoring, leadership, communication, community building.

Get involved

If you think you can help in any of the areas listed above (and we bet you can) or in any of the many areas that we haven't yet thought of (and here we're sure you can) then please check out our contributors' guidelines and our roadmap.

Please note that it's very important to us that we maintain a positive and supportive environment for everyone who wants to participate. When you join us we ask that you follow our code of conduct in all interactions both on and offline.

Acknowledgements

This repository was forked from https://github.com/open-life-science/open-life-science.github.io. We thank the creators of the Open Life Science program, in particular Yo Yeudi, for their time and advice and for letting us use their materials and guidelines as template.

We also thank Mozilla Open Leaders, in particular Abby Cabunoc Mayes and Chad Sansing for their mentorship and leadership and for sharing the how tos of this program with the world. We owe you a lot!

We also thank Julie Stewart Lowndes founder of Openscapes, and Emmy Tsang, community innovation officer and creator of eLIFE Innovator Leaders program, for their help, support, time and advice in creating this program.

How can I generate the website locally?

You need a ruby environment (version >= 2.4). Either you have it installed and you know how to install Bundler and Jekyll and then run Jekyll, or you use (mini-)conda, a package management system that can install all these tools for you. You can install it by following the instructions on this page: https://conda.io/docs/user-guide/install/index.html

In the sequel, we assume you use miniconda.

  1. Open a terminal

  2. Clone this GitHub repository:

    git clone https://github.com/open-life-science/open-life-science.github.io.git
    
  3. Navigate to the open-life-science.github.io/ folder with cd

  4. Set up the conda environment:

    make create-env
    
  5. Install the project's dependencies:

    make install
    
  6. Start the website:

    make serve
    
  7. Open the website in your favorite browser at: http://127.0.0.1:4000/

Run the link checks

To avoid dead or wrong links, run the link checkers:

make check-html

Create a new blog post

To create a new blog post:

  1. Create a file in the folder _posts with a file named following the pattern yyyy-mm-dd-name.md

  2. Add some metadata on the top of the file

    ---
    layout: post
    title: <title of the post>
    author: <github id of the author>
    image: images/yyyy-mm-dd-name.jpg
    ---
    
  3. Add content of the post in the file in Markdown

  4. Add images in images/posts/

Add someone as mentor, expert or organizer

  1. Open the _data/people.yaml file
  2. Create a new entry there (using the GitHub id) following the alphabetical order
  3. Fill in information using the tags:
    • name
    • email
    • website
    • twitter
    • gitter
    • orcid
    • description
  4. Add if the person should be listed as mentor by adding mentor: true
  5. Add if the person should be listed as expert by adding expert: true
  6. Add if the person should be listed as organizer by adding organizer: true

Add a partner/sponsor

  1. Open the _data/partners.yaml file
  2. Create a new entry there (using the name in lowercase, with spaces replaced by -) following an alphabetical order
  3. Fill in information using the tags:
    • name
    • website
    • description
  4. Add a logo (if possible) named as the entry in images/partners folder
  5. Add the path to the logo in _data/partners.yaml using logo tag

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A mentoring program for peer review organized and led by PREreview

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