The Social Sciences D-Lab offers about 80 workshops every semester. D-Lab workshop instructors teach scholars how to use important software and tools that support their research.
We are seeking a highly skilled and motivated individual to lead two Excel workshops. These workshops are designed to equip attendees with fundamental and advanced Excel skills to effectively handle data, perform calculations, create charts, and utilize pivot tables.
Anticipate a commitment of 24-30 hours per semester. Availability for a continuous 3-hour period between Monday and Thursday, 9am-5pm, is required. Excel workshops are conducted both remotely and in-person, and the curriculum has already been established. Each workshop is presented twice within a semester. Additionally, there are two shorter, in-person workshops offered each semester, lasting approximately 90 minutes.
Required Qualifications:
Proficiency in Excel, with a strong understanding of functions, charts, pivot tables, and the VLOOKUP function.
Excellent communication and presentation skills.
Previous teaching or training experience is a plus.
Ability to adapt to different learning styles and levels of proficiency.
Calling all digital humanities enthusiasts! We're excited to announce the return of our Digital Humanities Working Group! If you're interested in giving a lightning talk or workshopping your research, please sign up here.
The UC Berkeley Digital Humanities Working Group is a research community founded to facilitate interdisciplinary conversations in the digital humanities and cultural analytics. Our gatherings are participant driven and provide a place for sharing research ideas (including brainstorming new ideas and receiving feedback from others), learning about the intersection of computational methods and humanistic inquiry, and connecting with others working in this space at Berkeley. We encourage everyone to participate, regardless of your experience level. The DH Working Group is a welcoming and supportive community for all things digital humanities.
Last Tuesday of most months!
November 28, 12:30pm-1:30pm
January 30, 12:30pm-1:30pm
February 27, 12:30pm-1:30pm
March 26, 12:30pm-1:30pm
April 30, 12:30pm-1:30pm
Location: D-Lab, 356 Social Sciences Building, or join us via Zoom!
Mapping Census Data with tidycensus
by Alex Ramiller
The U.S. Census Bureau provides a rich source of publicly available data for a wide variety of research applications. However, the traditional process of downloading these data from the census website is slow, cumbersome, and inefficient. The R package “tidycensus” provides researchers with a tool to overcome these challenges, enabling a streamlined process to quickly downloading numerous datasets directly from the census API. This blog post provides a basic workflow for the use of the tidycensus package, from installing the package and identifying variables to efficiently downloading and mapping census data.
Interested in incubating and accelerating your data science, machine learning, or AI project? Join the nearly 900 data science research projects that have been helped by the Data Science Discovery Program!
The Data Science Discovery Program matches diverse teams of UC Berkeley students with partner organizations to tackle challenging data science problems for academic credit. Discovery also provides support for the research teams with project management guidance and access to experienced data science consultants.
We would love to support your research with the help of our student teams. Our students are well equipped to work on projects such as ML, NLP, data mining, etc. With this link you can find our past semester's projects and the Project Partner Application form.
Priority deadline: Fri, Nov 17 Final deadline: Thur, Nov 30
If you have any questions, please email the Data Science Discovery Team at ds-discovery@berkeley.edu.
The College of the Liberal Arts at the Pennsylvania State University invites applications for a tenure-track joint appointment at the Assistant Professor rank in the departments of Applied Linguistics and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (WGSS) to begin Fall 2024.
Applicants will have a Ph.D. in Applied Linguistics; Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies; or a related field at time of appointment. Outstanding evidence of research potential and a record of teaching excellence are required. Candidates must be theoretically and methodologically grounded in scholarship that overlaps within the fields of Applied Linguistics and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. They should demonstrate experience with and commitment to inclusive pedagogies.
We look forward to hiring a feminist scholar with an ambitious research agenda and a commitment to bringing excellence to undergraduate (and graduate) teaching.
The Division of Social Sciences is pleased to announce a request for proposals for funding from
the Abigail Reynolds Hodgen Publication Fund. This endowment was established in 1937 to
assist with the publication of manuscripts by women graduate students or women faculty
(members of the Academic Senate) in the Social Sciences.
Women-identified Senate faculty and graduate students in the Social Sciences are eligible to apply. Awards are up to a maximum of $20,000. Proposals are restricted to those that require funding for publication costs, which includes manuscript workshops. Proposals need not be more than one or two pages. They should include the manuscript title, a brief description of the project, and a budget breaking out the different items on which funds are to be spent.
Applications are being accepted on a rolling basis.
Title: How the National Internet Observatory can support your (privacy) research Speaker:Álvaro Feal, a Senior Research Scientist researcher at Northeastern University.
Abstract: The National Internet Observatory (NIO) is an NSF-funded Midscale infrastructure project at Northeastern University that aims to help researchers understand how people behave online and how platforms structure what people see.
To that end, the NIO works in two steps:
ethically collecting data from participants about their online experience,
safely making this data available for analysis to qualified researchers.
Álvaro Feal will provide an overview of the types of data that the NIO currently collects, and how this can be leveraged by researchers to enable (privacy) research.
Location: 2150 Shattuck Ave, Suite 250, Berkeley, CA 94704 Date/Time: Tuesday, November 14, 2023 @ 3pm PT
Refreshments will be served after the talk. Please RSVP in advance so we make sure to provide enough food and beverages for everyone.
Coming in 2024, California Research Bureau is launching CRB Nexus: Where Policy Meets Research! CRB Nexus is a community of practice for policy staff and researchers across California to initiate and build relationships, share policy needs and solutions, and find ways to move those ideas into action to benefit all Californians.
Together with co-hosts UC Berkeley Institute for Governmental Studies and UC Irvine School of Social Ecology, CRB Nexus will host 9 virtual events in 2024 featuring partner-recommended researchers by policy area.
The mission of the California Research Bureau is to provide nonpartisan and confidential public policy research for the Governor’s Office and the State Legislature and to advance equitable access via statewide initiatives.
Save the Dates:
Jan 26, 2024 - CRB Nexus Higher Education Panel
Feb 23, 2024 - CRB Nexus Economics, Labor, and Employment Panel
CRB partners with D-Lab for access to data science training and participates in the D-Lab Data Science Fellows program.
Support D-Lab
Join our community of donors by making a gift to D-Lab. Contributions of any size will support free, inclusive workshops and resources for the UC Berkeley community. Give today!