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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260519T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260519T140000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T143906Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142254Z
UID:10000573-1779195600-1779199200@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Using co-produced data in the doctorate
DESCRIPTION:Beginning from the Inside Out: The Value of Pilot Studies in Decolonial Research\nKate Matzopoulos\, PhD researcher in Education at the University of Bath \nThis presentation explores the value of conducting a pilot study prior to larger-scale research\, particularly when working with Indigenous and decolonial methodologies that are still in experimental phases and not widely documented in education research. My context\, with the Ju/’hoansi San community in Namibia\, is not widely written about outside of anthropology\, which meant that I had to draw from other Indigenous scholarship to piece together meaningful approaches. \nMy pilot study\, carried out during my master’s research\, was foundational in forming authentic relationships with the community. Relationality became the hinge on which the work rests: research emerges in and through relationships\, shifting with daily life rather than fitting into neat methodological boundaries. The pilot also revealed how to engage respectfully across difference and avoid reproducing colonial knowledge systems that obscure reality. \nUltimately\, the study affirmed the importance of beginning research from the “inside out\,” allowing Indigenous people to act as co-researchers working from their own onto-epistemologies\, rather than being framed by external categories or outsider lenses. This informs my ongoing fieldwork in my PhD studies. \n  \nConducting a pilot to trial photo diary instructions and assess the data generated\nLouise Toller\, SWDTP alumni in Sociology at the University of Exeter \nMy PhD research investigated the experiences of chronically ill young adults using a combination of verbal and visual methods\, specifically participant-generated photographs and photo elicitation interviews. In this presentation\, I describe how I used a pilot study to develop my visual method\, essential due to both my lack of prior experience and the lack of detailed information in published studies. I conducted a pilot with two main objectives: to trial the draft photo diary instructions I would give to participants\, and to assess the sort of data the photographs generated. I reflect on what I learned from the pilot\, and the modifications I then made to the photo-based phases of the main study\, highlighting lessons that I would not have gained without carrying out a pilot. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/using-co-produced-data-in-the-doctorate/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260514T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260514T120000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T143753Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142302Z
UID:10000572-1778756400-1778760000@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Critical Discourse Analysis: Methods and Approaches
DESCRIPTION:The study of language is a key component of social science research. Studies range from critical analyses of media discourse to historical approaches that uncover how language changes over time\, from micro-level analyses of pronunciation to macro-level examinations of the consequences of governmental policy. Language can tell us a great deal about society\, and society can tell us a great deal about language. Research in linguistics\, sociolinguistics\, linguistic anthropology and the sociology of language is methodologically and epistemologically rich. This session will introduce you to an approach that is both widespread and extremely useful beyond linguistics: critical discourse analysis (CDA). We will cover central aspects of CDA and explain how this method can be used on a variety of data. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/critical-discourse-analysis-methods-and-approaches/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260507T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260507T120000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T143646Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142312Z
UID:10000571-1778151600-1778155200@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Analysing qualitative data with diverse co-researcher and advisory input: Participatory qualitative methods in co-produced research with young people and parents
DESCRIPTION:Participatory research is a collaborative approach to inquiry that actively involves stakeholders\, like community members\, service users\, or practitioners\, in the design\, implementation\, and interpretation of research. These approaches can be applied to qualitative research across a wide range of fields\, ensuring that study findings are relevant\, inclusive\, and impactful. The spotLight on Adolescent and young adult Mood Problems (LAMP) group at the University of Bath will present their experiences of using a participatory research approach in qualitative studies\, with a focus on data collection/collation and analysis. \nThe first two presentations will focus on aspects of the Can We Connect with young people study\, which was a qualitative interview study (n = 24 13-18 year olds) exploring where young people look online for early mental health support and what they think of what they find. Prof Maria Loades will set the context for the study and its aims\, and describe how we involved young people as advisors and co-researchers. Dr Nina Higson-Sweeney will then specifically describe how we conducted the qualitative reflexive thematic analysis as a team\, which included young co-researchers. The third presentation by Natalia Kika will describe the challenges we encountered with involving parents in a qualitative systematic review\, and how those learnings helped us involve the LAMP parent advisory group (PAG) in the analysis of qualitative interviews with parents. The webinar will also highlight approaches that are feasible for PGRs and early-career researchers\, including resource-efficient co-production strategies and practical tips for sustaining meaningful engagement and partnerships across projects. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/analysing-qualitative-data-with-diverse-co-researcher-and-advisory-input-participatory-qualitative-methods-in-co-produced-research-with-young-people-and-parents/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260505T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260505T140000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T143533Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142316Z
UID:10000570-1777986000-1777989600@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Analysing media discourses
DESCRIPTION:Higher Education in Nigerian public discourse\nYusuf Olaniyan\, SWDTP-funded PhD researcher in Education at the University of Bath \nThis presentation will discuss the methodological approach and data analysis techniques used in my study of how higher education (HE) is constructed within Nigerian public discourse. The research combines media analysis with a discourse-historical approach (DHA) to explicate how HE is framed in Nigerian national news medias. It focuses specifically on the post-COVID period\, and the introduction of the National Universities Commission’s (NUC) Core Curriculum and Minimum Academic Standards (CCMAS) polices. The study used 331 media articles from three major Nigerian news media (Punch\, Daily Trust\, and Daily Post)\, published between 2021 and 2022\, which focused on the intersections of vocational education\, entrepreneurship\, skills training\, and apprenticeship-like pathways in the context of HE reforms. Through a two-phase analytical process\, the first phase involved a quantitative scan to map the frequency and thematic emphasis of HE discussions in the media\, highlighting the economic framing of HE around employability and market-driven outcomes. The second phase employed DHA to visibilised the ideological functions of these discourses. It also investigates how HE policies were legitimized\, how social actors were positioned\, and how historical continuities were reproduced in the media. Through this methodology\, the presentation will illustrate how media discourses serve both framing and gatekeeping functions to determining which perspectives on HE are amplified or marginalised. It will highlight the challenges of conducting discourse analysis on publicly available media data\, as well as the methodological and theoretical benefits of combining quantitative content analysis with a qualitative DHA framework. This session will be useful for doctoral researchers like me and early-career researchers interested in media analysis\, discourse studies\, and the intersection of policy\, education\, and public opinion in national contexts. \n\nHow do social media influencers legitimise veganism on YouTube?\nAdrianna Jerzierska\, PhD researcher in Business Studies at the University of Bristol \nIn this presentation\, I will outline the methodological framework used in my PhD project\, which aims to understand how social media influencers have legitimised veganism over time\, by analysing approximately 8\,000 YouTube videos posted between 2014 and 2024. \nDuring this workshop\, I will discuss the computational theory construction and the qualitative techniques used to study the discursive legitimation strategies by which influencers mainstream veganism. The first phase of the analysis involves generating the Dynamic BERT topic model (DTM). BERT is a large language model (LLM) that performs language tasks\, such as distilling clusters of documents with similar semantic topics. By incorporating temporal analysis of topics\, researchers can effectively track lexical changes across topics\, leading to a deeper understanding of discursive legitimacy over time. The second stage involves the qualitative interpretation of the machine output by adopting a qualitative content analysis of the videos to contextualise the discursive strategies used by online actors. \nGiven that BERT performs best with short texts compared to long and noisy YouTube video transcripts\, this was a significant challenge to overcome. In this webinar\, I will discuss the decisions made to work within these limitations\, as well as provide a brief overview of the analytical framework\, from querying and downloading videos using the YouTube API to discussing AI tools for converting large audio files into transcripts. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/analysing-media-discourses/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260430T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260430T140000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T143426Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142324Z
UID:10000569-1777554000-1777557600@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Handling data in decolonial research
DESCRIPTION:The Messy Realities of Anticolonial Research: Reimagining Language Practices in Secondary Education in Nigeria\nMercy Martins\, PhD researcher in Education at the University of Bath \nMy research explores how language practices in Nigerian secondary schools can be reimagined using anticolonial concepts of agency and resistance. The research design was indigenous\, weaving qualitative\, creative\, and participatory methods that were flexible and aligned with the daily experiences of my collaborators. Structured in two phases\, the first focused on the voices of marginalised students\, while the second included teachers\, parents\, school management\, and leadership. \nAfter securing ethics approval\, I conducted a small online pilot with local collaborators which informed my choice of a school with linguistic\, ethnic\, and religious parity. I prioritised depth in one all-male secondary school rather than breadth across two schools due to time constraints. Almost five months of fieldwork produced extensive data. To preserve Nigerian Pidgin and avoid rough translations\, I transcribed and cleaned the data manually. Journalling and a participatory analysis session\, where students directly engaged with the research questions\, guided the analysis. \nWhile I set aside some methods (such as Theatre of the Oppressed and parent interviews) for future work\, I sought to include multiple perspectives\, centre participant voices\, and clearly distinguish between their ideas and mine. Ethical tensions included deciding what to share\, avoiding reductive categorisation\, and ensuring authenticity. \n  \nStorytelling\, Embodiment\, and the Ethics of Analysing Bedouin Ethnography\nWesam Wekhyan\, PhD researcher in Social Policy at the University of Bath \nMy PhD research explores Bedouin identity\, knowledge\, and community praxis in central Jordan through a decolonial\, feminist ethnographic approach. The dataset is multi-modal: focus groups\, one-to-one interviews\, oral histories\, WhatsApp notes\, photos\, videos\, fieldnotes\, memos\, and observations of ceremonies and everyday life (weddings\, funerals\, dinners\, walkabouts). Much of this material was produced in a Bedouin dialect and a culture where history is preserved orally rather than textually\, requiring translation across dialect\, Arabic\, and English\, as well as from embodied\, performative expression into written form. Virtual data (voice notes\, chats\, images) extended this storytelling into digital space. \nWriting was not separate from analysis\, but a continuation of storytelling: through memos\, vignettes\, and embodied descriptions I traced how narratives lived\, moved\, and transformed across settings and generation. Analysing such material meant making decisions about segmentation and representation without erasing relational meaning. Ethical and personal challenges were constant: anonymity in small communities\, safeguarding oral/visual data sovereignty\, and navigating my insider–outsider position and the embodied emotional labour of researching from within. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/handling-data-in-decolonial-research/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260423T103000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260423T123000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20260319T121021Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260319T121306Z
UID:10000584-1776940200-1776947400@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Consultancy Skills Training
DESCRIPTION:This participative workshop run by How2Glu will help you to identify and develop key consultancy skills\, practical approaches to developing client relationships\, and workshop common issues. \nFirst\, we will look at drivers and prospective client / partner expectations and the characteristics of successful client consultant / partner-advisor relationships. We will then focus on essential ‘soft’ skills for consultancy – communication\, flexibility and collaboration. You will identify your strengths and areas for growth and explore strategies to develop and utilise these skills. During the session you will use glucard™ tools to help you identify ways of ‘adding value’ and ways to build / translate relationships for ‘upselling’\, repeat business and recommendations. We will look at different consultancy models\, such as salaried\, freelance\, associate\, and internal consultancy and consider how Intellectual Property (IP) relates to consultancy. Sabina will graphically illustrate concepts and demonstrate tools by sharing live visualisations. We will discuss common issues in consultancy and workshop ways to overcome them. We will use real examples and methods that are accessible\, visual and hands-on and mindful of the present context that will help you develop consultancy skills and opportunities. \n  \nFollow the link below for tickets.
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/consultancy-skills-training/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260421T103000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260421T120000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T143335Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142330Z
UID:10000568-1776767400-1776772800@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Posthuman data analysis?
DESCRIPTION:“Entanglement makes all the categories of humanist qualitative research problematic.” (Lather and St. Pierre\, 2013) \nHow does our analysis shift when we stop asking ‘What does this data show?’ and instead ask ‘Who and what is this data entangled with\, and how can we stay accountable to those relations?’ \nThis webinar invites pondering of the joys and challenges that emerge with data analysis when social researchers embrace their entangled inseparability from the world being researched. We explore what becomes possible when we analyse data as an experiment in relations rather than attempting to represent a universal reality. By considering the posthuman ontological turn and its implications for social sciences research\, we\, a group of posthumanist\, feminist materialist\, post-qualitative educational researchers\, share some of the processes and techniques that we employed as we grappled with the process of meaning making in our research projects. Through matter\, waters\, bodies\, silences\, we consider what our more-than-human data might say\, if it could speak\, and how such voices might re-shape the ways we engage with the worlds around us\, when we listen more expansively. \nBy showcasing examples of ‘how did we do it’\, this webinar is suitable for researchers at any career stage\, including ECRs\, who are either working with posthuman data analysis\, or are curious about practices that challenge conventional ways of doing social sciences research. In addition\, the webinar will provide an interactive opportunity for participants to engage in posthuman data analysis through practical examples. Anonymised data examples will be provided\, or participants are welcome to bring their own. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/posthuman-data-analysis/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260421T093000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260421T120000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20260121T105643Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260121T111453Z
UID:10000578-1776763800-1776772800@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Excellence at Interview- Grants and Jobs Masterclass
DESCRIPTION:An interview is a precious opportunity to make a positive\, memorable impression and advance a researcher’s career. Thorough preparation is vital\, and that means working on style as well as content. The way candidates conduct themselves\, present ideas and respond to questions has a powerful influence on the way they are perceived. Even an academic front-runner can come unstuck if he or she lacks ‘presence’ and has difficulty interacting with others. \n  \nThe topics addressed include: \n• Principles of effective interviews \n• Managing nerves and appearing confident \n• Achieving physical and vocal presence \n• Engaging the interview panel \n• Responding convincingly to questions. \n  \nCourse participants learn how to do themselves justice under interview conditions. They develop a clearer\, more authoritative interview style that allows the strength of their ideas to shine through. After the course\, you’ll be able to get access to a course summary\, follow-up material and the VOX Academy – an online repository of written guidance\, lively videos and other resources to help you extend your learning and take your communication skills to the next level.
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/excellence-at-interview-grants-and-jobs-masterclass-2/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260416T093000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260416T133000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20260310T095102Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260310T100756Z
UID:10000582-1776331800-1776346200@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Introduction to Longitudinal Data Analysis with R
DESCRIPTION:This four-hour workshop offers a practical introduction to panel and longitudinal data analysis (LDA) using R. Panel data—observations of the same individuals\, organisations\, or countries across multiple time points—are central to identifying causal relationships and accounting for unobserved factors in the social sciences.\n\nThe workshop introduces the core concepts and applied techniques of LDA\, drawing on perspectives from sociology\, econometrics\, and data science. Participants will learn when LDA is appropriate\, how to structure and prepare panel datasets\, and how to implement common modelling approaches in R. Through short lectures\, code demonstrations\, and guided exercises\, students will learn to work with Fixed Effects and Random Effects models\, address unobserved heterogeneity\, and choose suitable models for their own research.\n\n\nThe workshop covers:\n\nFundamentals of panel data: definitions\, when to use LDA\, and essential data management strategies.\nKey longitudinal modelling approaches: handling unobserved heterogeneity\, Fixed Effects and Random Effects models\, model selection\, and basic robustness checks.\nApplied examples and case studies illustrating LDA in practice.\n\n  \nTo find out more or to book tickets please follow the link below.
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/introduction-to-longitudinal-data-analysis-with-r/
CATEGORIES:Training
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260331T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260331T160000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20260316T110113Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T110113Z
UID:10000583-1774969200-1774972800@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:BDFI Seminar - Twins of Justice? The Role of Data Justice and Energy Justice in Advancing U.K. Aspirations for an Energy Digital Twin With Zia Saylor
DESCRIPTION:Our funded student Zia Saylor kicks off a new series of seminars at the Bristol Digital Futures Institute. \nDigital twins have received significant hype in the energy industry for their potential to create real-time models of energy systems that can be used to balance supply and demand within the energy grid. Even as the actualisation of these models remains elusive\, the Data Sharing Infrastructure (DSI) pilot in the U.K. has taken a first step of trying to integrate consumer smart meter data with industrial datasets responsible for day-to-day operations. This step forward comes as consumers have struggled with high energy bills and raised concerns about the privacy implications of smart meters. Grounded in these lived experiences\, data justice and energy justice have both offered insight into energy digitalisation efforts. Using the frameworks of data justice and energy justice\, this paper analyses stakeholder interview transcripts and secondary documents from the DSI’s implementation body. In considering both data justice and energy justice in dialogue with one another\, this paper finds that principles of each are often pitted against the other\, even as both can align under a common framework for broader social justice. Two potential reasons for this clash are explored with their implications: in the case of an intentional dichotomy\, this indicates an attempted perseverance of structural injustices. Alternatively\, unintentional discord reflects a need to embed principles of justice into design and advancement of future twin technologies. Both instances engage with debates of social justice and the relevance of discipline-specific terms in an era of increasing interdisciplinary technological advancement. \nBio: Zia Saylor is a second-year Ph.D. Candidate at the University of Bristol School for Policy studies\, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council through the South West Doctoral Training Partnership. Her thesis focuses on experiences and dynamics of well-being both within and across households in Cape Town and how that is shaped by experiences of load-shedding. She completed her Master of Science in Public Policy at the University of Bristol as a Fulbright Scholar after receiving her B.A. with honours in Political Science and Economics from Williams College. \nThe seminar is an outcome of the PhD placement with the South West Doctoral Training Partnership\, mentored by the BDFI Lecturer\, Dr Ola Michalec. The project follows on from the ongoing sociotechnical research on the development of digital twins in the energy sector. \nHybrid event. Register to attend here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/bdfi-seminar-twins-of-justice-with-zia-saylor-tickets-1985137158680?utm-campaign=social&utm-content=attendeeshare&utm-medium=discovery&utm-term=listing&utm-source=cp&aff=ebdsshcopyurl
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/bdfi-seminar-twins-of-justice-the-role-of-data-justice-and-energy-justice-in-advancing-u-k-aspirations-for-an-energy-digital-twin-with-zia-saylor/
LOCATION:Bristol Digital Futures Institute\, Avon Street\, Bristol\, BS20PZ
CATEGORIES:Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260331T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260331T140000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T143212Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142335Z
UID:10000567-1774962000-1774965600@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Visual mapping for data analysis
DESCRIPTION:Visual mapping of process data\nProf. Peter Turnbull\, Professor of Management at the University of Bristol \nIn several studies we have used visual mapping to depict changes over time and the (inter)action of the key players that we focus on in our research. We draw on the work of Anne Langley and others on “process research methods”\, using our visual maps for “temporal bracketing” and the application of “alternative templates” to explain (inter)action in each period and establish not simply “what’s going on here” but “what is this case of”? \nI could give a couple of examples from our research on: (i) the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the ILO’s (failed) attempt to develop a Convention (international labour standard) for decent work in global supply chains\, published in Human Relations\, and (ii) a recent paper on (successful) trade union resistance to the introduction of new technology in air traffic control\, published in New Technology\, Work and Employment. \nThe ILO study was based on a rich ethnographic dataset. My co-author worked at the ILO for 2.5 years during the deliberations on the proposed Convention and my own work with the ILO dates back to 1999. We encountered some rather very difficult challenges using these data as much of the “real work” at the ILO takes place “behind closed doors” and is therefore not part of the public record. \nThe study of trade union resistance to new technology (digital towers) was more straightforward as we have a close working relationship with Prospect (the union that represents air traffic controllers and technical staff) and Members of the Scottish Parliament who also opposed the plans were more than willing to discuss their concerns. \n  \nArt-based Mapping: an analysis of where teenagers spend their breaktime in school\nZifi Tung\, PhD researcher at the University of Bath \nFor decades\, research on play has primarily focused on young children\, emphasizing its benefits for social\, physical\, and cognitive development (Lindon\, 2007; Casey\, 2010\, Jawabri et al\, 2023).) This study shifts the focus to adolescents\, examining the nature of their playful experiences within a school setting. Data collection methods include map-making\, observations\, and focus group discussions. \nThis presentation focuses on the analysis of art-based maps created by students from year 7\,8\,9\,10 and 12. Art-based mapping techniques have been widely applied in urban planning and the study of adolescent spatial experiences (Lynch\,1960; Thomson and Philo\,2004; Travlou et al\, 2008; Webber et al\, 2014). In this study\, map-making was utilized to identify where students spend their break and lunch times\, their favourite and least favourite locations\, and restricted areas within the school. \nBy using content analysis\, findings indicate across all year groups\, most participants spend their free time with friends. During lunch\, students are primarily engaged in eating\, queuing for food\, and socializing with peers. Significantly\, only boys were shown to be playing football on the astro turf\, there were no girls reported to spend time there. These results underscore the significance of friendship and questions whether the breaktime experiences are gendered. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/visual-mapping-for-data-analysis/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260319T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260319T140000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T143015Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142339Z
UID:10000566-1773925200-1773928800@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Making sense of lived experiences through narratives
DESCRIPTION:Understanding home deathcare through narrative.\nSam Hooker\, SWDTP-funded PhD researcher in Social Policy at the University of Bath \nMy PhD project used a narrative methodology to capture people’s experiences caring for the dead at home. Two interviews were conducted with participants. The first consisted of asking them to tell me their experience\, while the second was used to ask questions to fill in gaps in the narratives. Then\, in the participant’s own words\, a chronological narrative of the event (core story) was formed\, which reads like a short story of their experience. This process was an emotionally taxing experience for me as a researcher\, due to the depth of immersion in the data. The core stories are included in the thesis\, allowing the data to remain situated\, capturing the complexity of a very personal and challenging experience for participants. While additional analysis is included\, the core stories allow the reader to draw conclusions from the data itself. They also provide a valuable resource for people who wish to take care of their own dead to learn from. \n  \nPutting a light in the window: using creative writing to focus analysis in relationally engaged research\nLuci Gorell Barnes\, PhD researcher in Education at UWE Bristol \nMy PhD investigates how relationally engaged arts-based research methods can support minoritised children to express\, reflect on\, and amplify their lived experiences and perceptions. I understand meaning-making as happening through the process of engagement\, and gathered data to consider the ‘double hermeneutic’ (Smith and Eatough\, 2021) of not only what the children expressed\, but how they did this through their conversations\, interactions\, and demeanours. \nThis study focuses on the children’s unique experiences and I wanted to examine what I had learned from each child\, foregrounding how they had ‘got under my skin’. Having familiarised myself with the data I then drew on less conscious or orthodox ways of knowing (Hammond and Fuller\, 2024) to write what I think of as ‘fictional portraits’ of my encounters with individual children. These were informed by the issues that child explored\, the metaphors and images they used\, and how they had interacted with me and each other. Using this process helped me get close to each child’s ‘internal narrative’ Mannay (2010\, p.10) and I came to understand each ‘portrait’ as being like a light in the window guiding me through the dark woods of data\, focusing my analysis and supporting me to write interpretive accounts that kept the relational nature of the study at their heart. McNiff (2019) suggests that fact and fiction can work together to deepen our understandings\, and by engaging with my data in this highly subjective and ‘interruptive’ way (Clark\, 2024\, p. 3) I brought a level of relational accuracy to my analysis that I might not have otherwise found. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/making-sense-of-lived-experiences-through-narratives/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260318T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260319T160000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20260310T094917Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260310T094917Z
UID:10000581-1773828000-1773936000@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Social Network Analysis Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Networks shape nearly every aspect of our lives\, from the spread of ideas and diseases to the dynamics of friendship\, crime\, and power. This two-day workshop introduces the theory and practice of Social Network Analysis (SNA) using R\, combining insights from sociology\, data science\, and computer science. \nParticipants will learn how to map\, measure\, and model networks using R. Through lectures\, interactive analysis walk-throughs\, and hands-on exercises\, we will cover the fundamentals of graph theory\, key network concepts\, and the principles of visualising\, modelling\, and interpreting network structures. \nBy the end of the workshop\, participants will understand how to collect and prepare network data\, analyse patterns of connection\, and design their own network-based research project. The course provides both the conceptual foundation and the practical skills to think critically about how networks shape our social world. \n  \nTo find out more\, please follow the link below.
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/social-network-analysis-workshop/
CATEGORIES:Training
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260312T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260312T140000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T142902Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142348Z
UID:10000565-1773320400-1773324000@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Negotiating positionality in data analysis
DESCRIPTION:Reflexive Thematic Analysis on researcher’s position as an “in-betweener”\nClaire Hadfield\, Senior Lecturer and PhD researcher in Education at Plymouth Marjon University \nReflecting on my journey using Reflexive Thematic Analysis (RTA) in a qualitative longitudinal study of early career secondary teachers’ professional identities\, I draw on my position as an “in-betweener”—moving from school teaching into initial teacher education. This role placed me close enough to share aspects of participants’ experiences while also able to view them from a different perspective. Working with interviews\, viva reflections\, and journals\, I returned to the data repeatedly in an iterative process of theme development. RTA supported deep engagement through analytic journaling and participant discussion. I will discuss how insider knowledge both enriched and complicated the analysis\, how slowing the process helped avoid premature conclusions\, and how reflexivity was essential in managing bias. The session will share practical strategies and honest reflections on the challenges and insights that came from applying RTA in a long-term\, identity-focused study. \n  \nHow to prioritise participant voice in data analysis when a third voice is present – the use of advocates in research\nKim Collett\, Lecturer in Education at The Open University \nFor my PhD I conducted interpretivist research\, using research driven photo elicitation interviews and thematic analysis\, comparing experiences of inclusion in the classroom. For some of the participants adjustments were needed to ensure the research was accessible. This included having advocates present during data collection. One of the under explored\, issues with advocacy in research is how to deal with advocate voices in the data. The words of advocates will appear in verbatim transcripts and removing them can change meaning/context. However\, keeping them means they become part of the analysis and introduce a third voice. \nI kept the voices of advocates and analysed these along with the words of the participants. However\, careful consideration was needed to determine if the data was really reflecting the experiences/thoughts of the participant when the advocate was speaking. Sometimes it was clear as the participant would verbally or non-verbally agree/disagree\, or the content would reflect other parts of the conversation. However\, sometimes there was no confirmation. Reflexivity was key to assessing this and the findings chapter had to carefully cover the use of advocates when a finding was based on or informed by the advocate. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/negotiating-positionality-in-data-analysis/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260303T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260303T140000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T142720Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142353Z
UID:10000564-1772542800-1772546400@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Validating constructs through quantitative sampling
DESCRIPTION:Using multi-dimensional experience sampling via smartphones to map thought-emotion interactions in daily life\nAnqi Lei\, PhD researcher at the University of Plymouth \nPatterns of on-going thought have crucial implications for emotional health. In the present study\, we used multi-dimensional experience sampling (MDES) via smartphones to examine how daily-life thought patterns relate to concurrent affective states (valence\, arousal\, stress) as well as how alexithymia traits (reflecting atypical emotional awareness) modulate these thought patterns across a range of affective and social situations. Principal Component Analysis of the MDES data identified four latent thought dimensions: future-self orientation\, intrusive distraction\, sensory engagement\, and task-focus. Linear Mixed Models revealed different associations between thought dimensions and affective states\, which may reflect distinct adaptive and maladaptive cognitive processes\, particularly in relation to alexithymia. High overall alexithymia predicted fewer future-self-oriented thoughts as well as more different sensory engagement across affective and social contexts. Regarding specific facets of alexithymia\, difficulty identifying feelings selectively reduced future-self orientation during intense sadness\, and externally oriented thinking rendered thought patterns less sensitive to affective contexts. By mapping affective experiences onto thought dimensions in daily life\, these findings uncover cognitive pathways that support emotional well-being\, providing a scalable framework for understanding variability in human affective experience. \n  \nMeasuring sensitive constructs in conservative contexts\nSara Yadollahi\, PhD researcher at the University of Bath \nAs a psychometrician\, I was responsible for data gathering and analysis in the project: “Development and Validation of an Iranian Scale for Problematic Online Pornography Use\,” which used a descriptive-correlational design and online non-random snowball sampling. A total of 1\,921 adults (813 women\, 1\,108 men) completed the scales: the Iranian Scale for Problematic Online Pornography Use (developed by the research team following multiple steps\, including a thorough literature review) and Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS). \nData were analysed using AMOS and SPSS. Confirmatory factor analysis supported a seven-factor model—Salience\, Mood Modification\, Tolerance and Escalation\, Withdrawal\, Relapse\, Conflict and Problems\, and Guilt (RMSEA=0.07\, CFI=0.91\, df=228). Construct validity was confirmed through intercorrelations among subscales and the total score; discriminant validity by the Fornell-Larcker criterion; convergent validity by Average Variance Extracted (AVE); and criterion validity by correlations with pornography use frequency (r=0.56)\, duration per session (r=0.35)\, and frequency of masturbation with (r=0.56) and without pornography (r=0.25). Reliability was strong (CR=0.98\, α=0.93). \nIn this webinar\, I will focus on the data analysis process\, including designing the scale with the research team\, conducting the pilot study\, being creative in measuring sensitive constructs in conservative contexts\, working with a large dataset\, and ensuring participant anonymity during data collection and analysis. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/validating-constructs-through-quantitative-sampling/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260303T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260306T235959
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20260217T095411Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260217T095411Z
UID:10000580-1772496000-1772841599@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Digital Research Skills for Social Scientists
DESCRIPTION:Date: 3rd – 6th March 2026 (four consecutive mornings) \nLocation: online \nThe National Centre for Research Methods are offering the opportunity to attend this introductory short course for the reduced price of £25 for all participants. Improve the efficiency and reliability of your research. Learn foundational computational skills including automating tasks using the command line on your computer\, tracking changes to your work using version control and building simple programs using the programming language python. These skills are the foundation of many powerful data analysis techniques including using Artificial Intelligence or High Performance Computing. \nPlaces are limited so don’t delay. Book your place here: https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/training/show.php?article=14333 [ncrm.ac.uk]
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/digital-research-skills-for-social-scientists/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260226T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260226T140000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T142459Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142359Z
UID:10000563-1772110800-1772114400@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Messy and mixed: working with quant and qual data
DESCRIPTION:Making Sense of Messy Legal Data: Analysing Climate Litigation in Latin America and the Caribbean\nCristian Heredia Ligorria\, PhD researcher in Socio-legal Studies at UWE Bristol \nMy doctoral research investigates rights-based climate litigation (RBCL) in Latin America and the Caribbean applying a socio-legal methodology and from a decolonial perspective. Chapter 3 of my thesis is grounded in the construction and analysis of a working dataset of 51 RBCL cases (as of November 2024). This process combined qualitative and quantitative methods to identify high-level trends\, map actors (who litigates\, against whom\, and in what contexts)\, and develop a typology of cases. \nThe analysis presented several methodological challenges: the diversity of legal systems across the region\, inconsistencies in reporting\, language barriers\, and the evolving nature of climate litigation. Data were cleaned and verified manually\, drawing on databases such as the Sabin Center and supplemented by direct regional expertise. Supervisory feedback\, peer-reviewed collaborations\, and external expert input were essential in refining the methodology and ensuring rigour. \nThis experience highlights both successes and the practical challenges of working with heterogeneous legal data\, and offers lessons for socio-legal researchers conducting comparative data analysis in underexplored regions. \n  \nUsing a structured case review tool to understand police investigation of rape cases\nAneela Khan\, Postdoctoral Research Assistant at Bournemouth University \nOperation Soteria Bluestone aimed to improve understanding of how police investigate rape cases in the UK. As part of this work\, we developed a structured case review tool to collect detailed information on individual investigations. In its initial format\, the tool required a junior officer to document case details and evaluate investigative strengths and weaknesses\, followed by a senior officer who repeated the review and provided oversight on the junior officer’s assessment. Due to several challenges\, the tool was adapted for the second year to allow researchers to directly access the cases and then populate the template. The dataset comprised qualitative and structured quantitative information\, including case characteristics\, investigative actions\, and assessments of investigative quality. Data analysis combined descriptive statistics to summarise trends and thematic coding to identify recurring strengths\, weaknesses\, and procedural patterns across cases. This methodology provided a systematic approach to evaluating investigative practices in rape cases and supports evidence-based recommendations for improving police investigations. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/messy-and-mixed-working-with-quant-and-qual-data/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260223T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260223T163000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T150732Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251205T150732Z
UID:10000574-1771840800-1771864200@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:GW4 Neurodivergent PGR Community Festival 2026
DESCRIPTION:Join us at the GW4 Neurodivergent Postgraduate Community Festival 2026 for a day of celebration\, connection\, and support! \n  \n Registration now open for the GW4 Neurodivergent PGR Community Festival 2026 We’re excited to invite neurodivergent postgraduate researchers from across Cardiff\, Bath\, Bristol and Exeter to join us on 23 February 2026 in Bristol for a day of connection\, celebration and community. This festival creates space for ND PGRs to: share experiences build supportive networks explore research identity meet others navigating academia as neurodivergent researchers ️ 23 February 2026 St Michael’s Centre\, Bristol\, BS34 8PD (5 minute walk from Bristol Parkway)  Register via Eventbrite: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/gw4-neurodivergent-pgr-community-festival-2026-tickets-1964553969808…
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/gw4-neurodivergent-pgr-community-festival-2026/
CATEGORIES:Conference
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260217T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260217T170000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20260113T141335Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T141335Z
UID:10000576-1771322400-1771347600@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Reproducible data analysis pipelines in R
DESCRIPTION:Years ago\, you wrote a data analysis script. Hundreds of lines of R code\, all in a single file. It was not beautiful\, but it worked\, and you got a great paper out of it. But now some new version of one of the datasets you used has come out\, and there is also that new statistical technique that you have been meaning to try anyway. Assuming you still have your original code somewhere\, can you still run it? Even on your new machine? Maybe. And do you need to re-run the whole thing if you only change parts of it? It did take ages to run… \nIn this one-day course\, you will learn about packages and practices that can help you make your analyses reproducible and portable. The material is centred around the `targets` package for building computational pipelines\, but we will also talk about `renv` for package management\, `git` and GitHub for version control and remote execution\, and Quarto for the production of final research outputs. We will also\, of course\, use the `tidyverse` throughout. \nSome basic proficiency in R is required to make the most of this course. \nSpaces are limited so we cannot guarantee a place at the point of registration. Places will be allocated on a first-come\, first-served basis\, and once places are full\, we will maintain a waiting list. \n  \nPlease note this event is not delivered by the SWDTP. Please direct enquiries to granduniondtp@socsci.ox.ac.uk \nRegistration: https://www.granduniondtp.ac.uk/event/reproducible-data-analysis-pipelines-in-r
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/reproducible-data-analysis-pipelines-in-r/
LOCATION:6 Worcester St\, Oxford OX1 2BX
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260212T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260212T170000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20260113T141656Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T141656Z
UID:10000577-1770890400-1770915600@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Introduction to agent-based modelling in NetLogo Introduction to agent-based modelling in NetLogo
DESCRIPTION:Whether it’s ant colonies\, traffic jams\, fisheries\, predator-prey interactions\, segregation patterns in urban areas\, or viruses spreading through populations\, we are surrounded by complex systems. Those have lots of different parts that interact in non-linear ways\, giving rise to patterns that are difficult to predict by looking at individual components in isolation. And when these components are agents that can adapt and learn\, it gets even harder. \nAgent-based models (ABMs) are one way of looking at these systems. By explicitly representing agents\, their behaviours and interactions\, and using simulations to work out the consequences of these mechanisms\, ABMs can provide candidate explanations for the observed patterns. \nIn this introductory course\, we will look at where ABMs come from\, how they work\, and what they are good for. We will learn how to build a simple model using NetLogo\, a programming environment specialised in agent-based modelling. We will also see how to estimate the parameters of a model using empirical data and\, once we have a calibrated model\, how to use it for policy optimisation. \nSome familiarity with computer programming is desirable\, but no prior experience with NetLogo is expected. \n  \nPlease note this event is not delivered by the SWDTP. Please direct enquiries to: granduniondtp@socsci.ox.ac.uk \nRegistration: https://www.granduniondtp.ac.uk/event/introduction-to-agent-based-modelling-in-netlogo
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/introduction-to-agent-based-modelling-in-netlogo-introduction-to-agent-based-modelling-in-netlogo/
LOCATION:6 Worcester St\, Oxford OX1 2BX
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260210T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260210T140000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T142338Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142401Z
UID:10000562-1770728400-1770732000@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Philosophy as method for data analysis in research
DESCRIPTION:Educational researchers are often encouraged to reflect on their ‘philosophical positioning’\, i.e. the ontological\, epistemological and axiological (ethical) assumptions that underpin their research design. Meanwhile\, in recent years in anglophone educational research departments\, using philosophy as a ‘method’ in its own right\, as opposed to a tool supporting empirical research\, has tended to go out of fashion. A group identifying as philosophers of education\, including current doctoral researchers and their supervisors\, seek to demonstrate the benefits and attractions of continuing to work philosophically\, sometimes treating the existing literature as priori data to be analysed\, at other times working in partnership with empirical research. They showcase a range of distinctive philosophical perspectives\, including examples from hermeneutical/analytical (Janet Orchard + 1) and critical/post-structuralist (Naomi Hodgson + 1) traditions.  This event is aimed at doctoral researchers at any stage who would like to hear more from enthusiasts of the theoretical on how to think more abstractly about data analysis in research. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/philosophy-as-method-for-data-analysis-in-research/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260205T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260206T170000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20260202T144541Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260202T144541Z
UID:10000579-1770285600-1770397200@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Bayesian Statistics for Applied Research
DESCRIPTION:This two-day course provides a practical and accessible introduction to Bayesian statistics for applied research in any field. Students will benefit from a combination of lectures and discussion to explore fundamental concepts unlocking the potential to design bespoke statistical analyses based on your data and hypotheses as well as practical exercises to gain hands-on experience implementing Bayesian models using free and open-source software. The course is designed as a springboard to overcome the steepest part of the Bayesian learning curve with an immersive two-day deep-dive.
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/bayesian-statistics-for-applied-research-2/
CATEGORIES:Training
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260205T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260206T170000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20250819T142729Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250819T142729Z
UID:10000528-1770285600-1770397200@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Bayesian Statistics for Applied Research
DESCRIPTION:This two-day course provides a practical and accessible introduction to Bayesian statistics for applied research in any field. Students will benefit from a combination of lectures and discussion to explore fundamental concepts unlocking the potential to design bespoke statistical analyses based on your data and hypotheses as well as practical exercises to gain hands-on experience implementing Bayesian models using free and open-source software. The course is designed as a springboard to overcome the steepest part of the Bayesian learning curve with an immersive two-day deep-dive. \nStudents will have the opportunity to schedule a follow-up Bayesian surgery appointment (30 mins in-person or remote) for one-to-one engagement (or small groups\, as preferred) with the course instructor to answer burning questions that remain and/or to troubleshoot technical challenges related to their own research applications. \nPre-requisites: Students will need good programming skills in R and a basic understanding of linear regression to be successful in this course. \n  \nPlaces will be allocated on a first-come\, first-served basis\, and once places are full\, we will maintain a waiting list. \nPlease only register if you are certain of your availability and commitment to attend. \n  \nThis event is not delivered by the SWDTP. For enquiries\, please contact granduniondtp@socsci.ox.ac.uk
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/bayesian-statistics-for-applied-research/
LOCATION:London School of Economics and Political Science
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260127T103000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260127T120000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20250930T145717Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250930T145804Z
UID:10000552-1769509800-1769515200@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Philosophy of Social Science
DESCRIPTION:This talk will draw upon Alexander Betts’ recent book Social Science: A Very Short Introduction to offer a contemporary take on the philosophy of social science. It will focus in particular on the underpinnings of interdisciplinary social science\, arguing that across disciplines\, the social sciences have more in common than that which divides them.  \nWhere: Hybrid | GUDTP Hub \nWhen: 27.01.2026|10:30-12:00 \nAdvert & Registration: https://granduniondtp.web.ox.ac.uk/event/philospophy-of-social-science \nThis event is not organised by the SWDTP. Please direct enquiries to the Grand Union DTP: paula.sheppard@anthro.ox.ac.uk
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/philosophy-of-social-science/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260127T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260128T170000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251104T160046Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251104T160046Z
UID:10000557-1769504400-1769619600@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Qualitative Research Symposium - Applications & Call for Papers
DESCRIPTION:The Centre for Qualitative Research looks forward to inviting you all to the University of Bath to ponder important questions around participation\, access and inclusion in qualitative research. \n  \nIf you would like to attend or apply for the call\, check out the link below.
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/qualitative-research-symposium-applications-call-for-papers/
CATEGORIES:Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260122T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260122T140000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251205T142213Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142404Z
UID:10000561-1769086800-1769090400@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Analysing large-scale assessment data
DESCRIPTION:Issues with using police data to investigate offending: A research perspective\nDr Ioana Crivatu\, Research Fellow at the University of Birmingham\nDr Ruth Spence\, Senior Research Fellow at Middlesex University \nPolice data is an important source of information for researchers about investigations\, suspects\, and victims. However\, crime records can be problematic to work with. Here we outline three key issues along with our approach in combining and quantitatively analysing police data from several police forces in England and Wales which used different crime recording systems. We discuss data quality\, which reflects missing and misclassified values; inconsistency\, which refers to the vague and at times different definitions provided; and granularity\, which reflects the lack of detailed information included in the datasets. We recommend developing a robust strategy for working with missing data\, triangulating across different sources\, creating higher-order categories where necessary\, and creating a detailed data governance plan before analysis begins. \nLink to published paper: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0032258X251313944 \n  \nPreparation of a Large-scale Assessment in Education and its use in a Quantitative Intersectional analysis in R\nDr Natalia López-Hornickel\, Postdoctoral Research Associate at Roehampton University; SWDTP alumni\nIn this presentation\, first\, I aim to show the considerations and challenges of preparing large-scale assessment data\, using the International Civic and Citizenship Education Study (ICCS) from 2016. This includes the sources of the data and the merging process\, which is usually an overlooked but crucial step before proceeding with the analysis. Second\, I will refer to the analysis steps to obtain descriptives and models. Particularly\, I will use the case of the Multilevel Analysis of Individual Heterogeneity and Discriminatory Accuracy (MAIHDA) to develop an intersectional analysis of students’ endorsement of the gender equality scale (Fifth paper of my thesis). This technique is a parsimonious alternative to multiplicative terms in regressions. \nAll the explanations will be conceptual and also accompanied by a description of some R syntax. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/analysing-large-scale-assessment-data/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260120T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260120T140000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251104T151112Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T142409Z
UID:10000556-1768914000-1768917600@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:What is Research Data? Practical Guidance on Organising and Sharing your Files and Findings
DESCRIPTION:Every research project generates data. It’s the material that you gather\, create\, or interpret to answer your research questions; whether that is numbers\, images\, recordings\, or documents. Good research data management and sharing are essential for making your work accessible\, your methods transparent\, and your findings easy to use and build upon. Funders\, publishers\, and universities require researchers to share and cite their research data – but what does this look like in practice? This webinar offers practical tips and guidance to organise\, store and share your documents and results effectively throughout your project. This session covers: \n\nWhat is research data and why it matters\nThe expectations of funders\, publishers\, and universities for research data storage and sharing\nHow to organise and describe your files so you can easily find and understand your research data throughout your project\nHow to ethically share research data when working with human participants\nHow to find a suitable research data repository for your work\nWhat support is available beyond your supervisory team\n\nThe speaker for this session is Dr Jade Godsall who is an Assistant Research Support Librarian in Research Data Management and Digital Scholarship at The University of Bristol. \nThis session is part of the SWDTP Data Analysis Webinar Series. Visit the following link for further information and registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/swdtp/1956811
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/what-is-research-data-practical-guidance-on-organising-and-sharing-your-files-and-findings/
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training,Webinar/Seminar/Symposium
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260120T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260120T163000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251216T112018Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251216T112041Z
UID:10000575-1768903200-1768926600@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:International large-scale assessment analysis in R workshop
DESCRIPTION:January 20th University of Bath\, 10:00 – 16:30 \n  \nThis is a workshop for analysing data from international large-scale assessments. The workshop will focus on the International Civic and Citizenship Education Study (ICCS)\, but the content is applicable for other assessments (e.g. TIMSS\, PISA\, PIRLS). \nThe goal of the workshop is to support students from any discipline interested in analysing data from international large-scale assessments. We will cover all stages in the analysis cycle\, including downloading the data\, identifying variables of interest\, descriptive statistics\, and basic analytical statistics. \nThe workshop focuses on using R for analysis. Basic familiarity with the software would be useful but support can be given for those less familiar. R code for example analyses will be provided so that students can use it as a reference in the future. \nLunch will be provided. This workshop is supported by the SWDTP and developed in collaboration with the ICCS international study centre in the Department of Education at the University of Bath. \nTo register your interest and find out more\, please contact Adam Coates: ac3615@bath.ac.uk
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/international-large-scale-assessment-analysis-in-r-workshop/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260113T091500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260115T160000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20251017T114807Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251017T114807Z
UID:10000553-1768295700-1768492800@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Introduction to Multilevel Modelling\, Using MLwiN\, R\, or Stata
DESCRIPTION:Introduction to Multilevel Modelling\, Using MLwiN\, R\, or Stata  \n13-15 January 2026\, Online via Zoom \nClosing date for applications is 23rd November 2025. \nThis workshop is run by the University of Bristol School of Education. Further information and the booking form can be found at the following link: \nhttp://www.bris.ac.uk/cmm/software/support/workshops/
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/introduction-to-multilevel-modelling-using-mlwin-r-or-stata-2/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260113T091500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260115T160000
DTSTAMP:20260416T192001
CREATED:20250930T125839Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250930T125839Z
UID:10000550-1768295700-1768492800@www.swdtp.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Introduction to Multilevel Modelling Using MLwiN\, R\, or Stata
DESCRIPTION:Run in partnership with NCRM\n\nPlease note this event is not run by the SWDTP. Please direct enquiries to Lucy Haslam at the University of Bristol Centre for Multilevel Modelling: lucy.haslam@bristol.ac.uk\nPlease note the closing date for applications is 23rd November 2025\n \nGo to booking form >>\n\nInstructors\nProfessor George Leckie and Professor William Browne\n \nSummary\nThis three-day course provides an introduction to multilevel modelling and includes software practicals in your choice of software: MLwiN\, R\, or Stata. We focus on multilevel modelling for continuous and binary responses (dependent or outcome variables) when the data are clustered (nested or hierarchical). These models can be viewed as an extension of conventional linear and logistic regression models to account for and learn from the clustering in the data. Such models are appropriate when\, for example\, analysing exam scores of students nested within schools\, or health outcomes of patients nested within hospitals. Special interest lies in disentangling social processes operating at different levels of analysis by decomposing the within- from the between-cluster effects of covariates (explanatory or predictor variables). Longitudinal data are also clustered\, with repeated measurements on individuals or multiple panel waves per survey respondent. Throughout the course we emphasize how to interpret multilevel models and the types of research question they can be used to explore.\n\nTestimonials\n\n“The course was really excellent – clearly structured and in a logical order. Speakers were fantastic.”\n\n“The course was excellent – far exceeded expectations. The course has given me the confidence to use MLM\, something I very much lacked before. I feel I understand the theory behind MLM\, why each stage is so important\, and the various interpretations. Without this course I would be lost. I cannot thank you all enough.”\n\n“This was a beautifully constructed course. It was clear throughout that careful thought had been given to providing a balance between lecture content\, time for questions and discussion\, and practical sessions. Both George and Bill delivered fantastic lectures – explanations were clear and thorough (including critiques of each approach) and content built up in complexity over time with plenty of worked examples of different kinds. The course was superb – can’t rate it highly enough.”\n\n“I thought it was a really good double act between George and Bill – they are both hugely knowledgeable so having one person focused on the slides and the other manning the chat was a good approach as it meant the teaching didn’t get derailed by people’s questions.”\n\n“Both George and Bill have excellent presentation styles. I really liked that they ‘riffed’ off of each other with gentle humour.”\n\nTopics\n\nOverview of multilevel modelling\nVariance-components models\nRandom-intercept models with covariates\nBetween- and within-effects of level-1 covariates\nRandom-coefficient models\nGrowth-curve models\nThree-level models\nReview of single-level logistic regression\nTwo-level logistic regression\n\n\nFormat\nThe course will consist of a 2:1 mix of lectures and hands-on practical sessions applying the taught methods to real datasets. The instructors alternate the lecturing. The lectures are software independent. Each lecture is immediately followed by a software practical giving participants the chance to replicate the presented analyses and to consolidate their knowledge. The practicals are offered in participants’ choice of MLwiN\, R\, or Stata and are self-directed: participants complete the practicals at their own pace. At the end of each practical session the instructors demo the different software. In both the lectures and practicals\, participants have opportunities to interact with the instructors.\n\nZoom\nThe course will be delivered online via the freely accessible Zoom platform. The lectures will be delivered live. Participants can ask questions via Zoom’s text-based chat facility and these will be monitored and answered by the instructor not presenting or relayed to the instructor presenting to answer live.\n\nParticipants are encouraged to join the lectures live\, but recordings of the lectures will be made available shortly afterwards for twelve weeks following the course if participants are unable to attend at the scheduled time. After twelve weeks\, video access will end and will not be extended.\n\nDuring the practicals\, participants can also speak with the instructors. Participants can use these opportunities to ask specific questions about the course material or about multilevel modelling related to their own research. Each software package will be demonstrated in a different breakout room.\n\nMaterials\nParticipants will be emailed in advance with comprehensive PDF copies of the lecture slides together with point-and-click instructions and datasets for MLwiN\, and annotated syntax files and datasets for R and Stata. During the practicals\, participants are encouraged to view the lecture slides on a second screen (or tablet etc.)\, else print copies out to have in front of them. Those choosing to use MLwiN may also want to view the point-and-click instructions on a second screen\, else print them out.\n\nSoftware\nFor those choosing to use MLwiN\, we will provide instructions as to how to download and install the free teaching version of this software. For those wishing to use R or Stata we assume you are already users of these software so have them installed.\n\nPre-requisites\nWe assume no prior knowledge of multilevel modelling. However\, participants should be familiar with estimating and interpreting linear regression models\, including the writing and interpretation of model equations\, hypothesis testing and model selection\, and the use and interpretation of dummy variables and interaction terms.\n\nWe will email in advance a pre-recorded lecture\, to be completed at the participant’s leisure\, which provides a review of linear regression accompanied with software instructions and datasets to replicate the analyses in MLwiN\, R\, and Stata.\n\nFor those choosing to use MLwiN\, we assume no prior knowledge of using this software and so we provide step-by-step instructions to allow you to replicate all presented analyses in MLwiN. For those choosing R or Stata\, we assume you are already users of these software and so know the basics.\n\nTimings\nThe course starts and ends each day at 09:15 and 16:00 with a 30-minute morning break and a one-hour break for lunch from 13:00 to 14:00.\n \nFees\n\nFor UK-registered MSc and PhD students – £180\nFor UK university academics\, UK public sector staff\, and staff at UK registered charity organisations – £360\nFor all other participants – £660\n\n\nPlease note\, in order to be eligible for the reduced pricing brackets please submit your application using your UK academic/organisational email address.\n \nCancellation/refunds\nA full refund will be given if cancellation occurs two weeks prior to the event. No refund is given after this date. By completing the application form\, you are accepting these cancellation terms.\n \nApplications\nIf you would like to attend the workshop\, please complete and submit the online booking form (see below). Please note the closing date for applications is 23rd November 2025.\n\nApplications will be processed on a rolling basis\, once a week\, until the application deadline. A link to the University of Bristol’s online shop will be provided and your place on the course will be confirmed upon successful payment.\n\nIf you have any queries\, please email info-cmm@bristol.ac.uk.\n \nGo to booking form >>\n\nTerms and conditions\nPlease click here to read the booking terms and conditions before completing the booking form. Note that it is the participant’s responsibility to ensure that Zoom and their choice of MLwiN\, R\, or Stata software is up-to-date and works on their computer in advance of the course\, as the Centre for Multilevel Modelling is unable to provide technical support.\n\nMLwiN\nMLwiN is dedicated multilevel modelling software developed by our research team for more than 30 years. On this course we will be using the free teaching version of MLwiN. This version works with all the datasets used on the course and a wide range of other teaching datasets which come with the software. We will email you the teaching version prior to the start of the course.\n\nShould you wish to use MLwiN after the course with your own data\, you will need to use the regular version of MLwiN. This is free to UK academics (but without user support) reflecting long periods of funding from the UK’s Economic and Social science Research Council (ESRC). For all other users\, there is a 30-day trial version\, but after that you will have to purchase MLwiN if you wish to continue using it to analyse your own data. There are various price options available. http://www.bristol.ac.uk/cmm/software/mlwin/\n \nMLwiN is Windows software\, but can be run on Mac via the Wine software or through a virtual machine such as Parallels\, depending on the Mac model and version of MacOS on your machine.
URL:https://www.swdtp.ac.uk/event-calendar/introduction-to-multilevel-modelling-using-mlwin-r-or-stata/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Higher Level Training,Training
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