Tag Archives: community science

Research Update: Citizen Science Capacity in California’s Central Coast

November 27th, 2013

**This blog entry orginally appeared on the website oceanspaces.org.**/p> Through the California Citizen Science Initiative, we’re beginning to feel confident that we have identified all of the marine-related citizen science activity in the Central Coast – that’s from Pigeon Point to Point Conception. We filled out our list through a web search and fleshed it […]

One Year of OceanSpaces!

November 25th, 2013

**This blog entry orginally appeared on the website oceanspaces.org.**/p> November marks the first anniversary of the online community – and our community is the heart of OceanSpaces.  In our first year, we’ve grown to 600+ members, who are broadly engaged across the platform: downloading data; sharing monitoring results; writing blogs and more.  The interactive e-book, […]

Myths of Citizen Science: Education and Science Goals are Always a Tradeoff

November 20th, 2013

**This blog entry orginally appeared on the website oceanspaces.org.**/p> If the goal of citizen science is at least partially to educate volunteers about the subject at hand, then how can you expect new volunteers to take good data? This chicken-and-egg conundrum pops up periodically, often with a skeptical eye toward the quality of volunteer-collected data […]

Creating Beneficially Mutual Links Between Citizen Science and Ocean and Coastal Resources: Insights from the CERF 2013 workshop

November 14th, 2013

**This blog entry orginally appeared on the website oceanspaces.org.**/p> Last week we kicked off the Coastal and Estuarine Research Federation with a workshop to wrap our minds around the ways citizen science can and does contribute to the science and management of our ocean and coastal resources. We had a great group of people with […]

Icky Bugs and Slimy Slugs: Fears in Citizen Science – the Halloween Special

October 31st, 2013

**This blog entry orginally appeared on the website oceanspaces.org.**/p> Picture a kid, first or second grade, with his head buried in an unweildy bush seeking a picture of a beetle. He’s so excited about said beetle that he’s practically upside-down, branches reaching over his head and down his back. What a crazy outdoorsy kid, right? […]