The problem
- Recently, the scientific community took steps to reflect a widespread awareness of, and call for, improved practices ushering in the “credibility revolution” including higher standards of evidence, preregistration, direct replication, transparency, and openness.
- Structurally, three pillars were proposed to carry social sciences towards academic utopia: opening scientific communication, restructuring incentives and practices, and collaborative and crowdsourced science.
However, ongoing attempts have neglected an essential aspect of the academic machinery: students. And indeed, current norms for the teaching and mentoring in higher-education are rooted in obsolete practices of bygone eras. Improving transparency and rigor of science is the responsibility of all who engage in it.
The solution
- In our view, a scientific utopia has a fourth pillar, whose principal goal is to familiarize students, who are future consumers of science and perhaps themselves knowledge producers, with the intricacies of the process of science.
- We believe the teaching and mentoring of reproducible and open research practices is the clearest indicator of the degree to which institutions and/or departments embody principles of credible science.
- This demonstration goes beyond paying lip service to best practices, and ensures that students are trained to engage in these practices.
FORRT is designed by, and envisioned for, educators who wish to integrate typical discipline content with open and reproducible science tenets.
FORRT supports this endeavor through a three-pronged approach:
Providing to educators a comprehensive, straightforward, and accessible framework to qualify and quantify the degree of open and reproducible research practices in their teaching and mentoring.
FORRT’s clusters
Equipping scholars with high quality pedagogical tools on open and reproducible research practices. Instructors can then adapt successful and implemented pedagogies to help ease the transition and reduce the instructor’s burden.
FORRT’s Educational Nexus
FORRT’s Pedagogies
Modifying the academic incentive structure regarding teaching and mentoring through recognition and commendations of excellent teaching and mentoring, which in turn are documentable and relevant to the researchers’ visibility, prestige, tenure and promotion reviews; foster social justice through the opening and democratization of scientific-educational resources to those who otherwise would be educationally disenfranchised; and building a community with existing educational initiatives and strengthening our missions, identify and reduce redundancies, and streamline the advancement of open educational practices.
Institutional Partnerships
FORRT’s Manuscript