Commitment issues: how to get my community organization to say yes to an integrated KT project
February 24, 2017
Speaker
Chris McBride, Executive Director, Spinal Cord Injury BC
Objectives:
- Appreciate the important role community organizations (research users) can play in integrated knowledge translation (iKT)
- Understand what often prevents community organizations from engaging in iKT projects
- Understand what it takes for a community organization to commit to an iKT partnership
Resources
- Presentation Slides (PDF)
- Commitment Issues Part 1 (Chris McBride): How to get my organization to say yes to an integrated KT project
- Commitment Issues Part 2 (Heather Gainforth): How to foster long-term collaborations with community organizations – a researcher’s perspective
- Applied Behaviour Change (ABC) Lab
- Canadian Disability Participation Project (an alliance of university, public, private and government sector partners working together to enhance community participation among Canadians with physical disabilities)
- Why Spinal Cord Injury Research Needs You (video)
- Stopwatch series (ICORD research participation promo) (videos)
- How SCI BC Helps People with Spinal Cord Injuries (video)
- SCI BC in 2016: Little Things Big Impact (video)
- The Spin Magazine
- Spinal Cord Injury Sexual Health
Upcoming webinar
Dr. Kelly Cobey
Date
September 27, 2024
Shifting research assessment to open science and beyond
In 2024, KT Connects is focusing on open science — the practice of making scientific inputs, outputs, and processes freely available to all with minimal restrictions. Learn more.
Webinar summary
Friday, September 27
12 – 1 p.m. PST
In this webinar, Dr. Kelly Cobey will provide an overview of national and international science policy related to open science. She will discuss why implementing open science has been relatively slow in Canada and share considerations to drive improvements.
She will talk about the academic incentives and rewards used in the Canadian research system, explaining why they can be ineffective to help most funders or institutions reach mission-driven goals. She will use examples to highlight instances where the system could be improved to align with patient preferences.
Learning objectives
After this webinar, the audience will be able to:
• describe limitations of the current system of incentives and rewards in research
• describe what open science is and factors that impact its implementation
• identify relevant Canadian science policies and frameworks related to open science and research assessment
Speaker bio
Dr. Kelly Cobey is a scientist at the University of Ottawa Heart Institute where she leads the Metaresearch and Open Science Program. She is also an associate professor in the School of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Ottawa. Dr. Cobey has interests in topics including the implementation of open science, the reporting quality of research, data management and sharing best practices, research reproducibility, and patient engagement in research. She is active in the national and international global science policy community. She presently serves as the co-chair of Declaration On Research Assessment (DORA) and is a current member of the Council of Canadian Academies expert panel on dual-use research of concern (DURC). She actively consults to provide her expertise to federal agencies and academic institutions.