HO
Heather Owen
Data Librarian (Data management and data science; Digital curation and preservation; Open access)
University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA
Heather Charlotte Owen is currently a Data Librarian at the University of Rochester, where she reviews DMSPs, assists researchers with data management and sharing, and teaches data workshops. She has a MS in Library and Information Science and a CAS in Data Science from Syracuse University, and a BA in Mathematics and English Literature from the University of Rochester.
Publications
- Evolving Data Ecosystem at an Academic Library
- Data Bloom: Bridging Communities through Data Workshops
- Competing Data Needs: Reconciling Policies, Infrastructure, and Practices
- LabArchives, Electronic Lab Notebook for Modern Scientists
- Connecticut Digital Archive in Context: Addressing Systemic Bias in Cultural Heritage Repository Programs
- Escaping Our Fishbowl: A Case Study on Expanding Participation by the Connecticut Digital Archive
- Backwards Design: A Critical Approach to Instructional Design
- Centering Student Labor: A Practical Examination of Digital Library Experiences in the LIS Student Lifecycle
- Their Challenges are Our Challenges Too: Librarian Involvement in the Grand Challenges in Assessment Project
- The Missing Data: The Absence of Data Literacy in Librarianship
- It's Time for an Update: Analysis of Assessment Skills in Library Job Postings
- The Connecticut Digital Archive In Context
- Maximizing Interoperability Through Metadata: A Student Initiative
- There's a Standard for That
- A metadata workflow for digitizing community archives
- Love Data Month: A Journey of Continuous Enhancement
- OpenRefine Primer
- Diving Into OpenRefine: Creating a Tool-Based Primer
- Unlocking the Secrets of Research: A Guide to Reproducibility and Effective Data Management
- Accessibly Create and FAIR(ly) Share Visualizations​
- OpenRefine in Action: Creating a New Tool-Based Primer for the Data Curation Network
- Data Discovery Meets Experiential Learning: The Core10 Project