While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying do-it-yourself pollutio...
Public Lab is an open community which collaboratively develops accessible, open source, Do-It-Yourself technologies for investigating local environmental health and justice issues.
130 | stevie |
October 16, 2018 13:39
| over 5 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit also supports fellowships that emphasise peer production projects working on community environmental health issues. Fellowships activities can include:
Current fellows include:
Past Fellows:
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129 | stevie |
July 28, 2017 20:04
| almost 7 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives Past Fellows:
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128 | stevie |
July 28, 2017 20:03
| almost 7 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives Past Fellows: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. Don Blair Open Water Fellow http://publiclab.org/profile/donblair |
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127 | stevie |
July 28, 2017 20:02
| almost 7 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. Past Sprint Fellows and Projects: Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives Past Fellows: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. Don Blair Open Water Fellow http://publiclab.org/profile/donblair |
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126 | donblair |
March 01, 2017 01:14
| about 7 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. Current Sprint Fellows and Projects: Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives Past Fellows: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. Don Blair Open Water Fellow http://publiclab.org/profile/donblair |
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125 | donblair |
March 01, 2017 01:13
| about 7 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. Current Sprint Fellows and Projects: Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives Past Fellows: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision.
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124 | pdhixenbaugh |
December 07, 2016 07:34
| over 7 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. Current Sprint Fellows and Projects: Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives Past Fellows: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. |
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123 | ygzstc |
May 05, 2016 19:35
| almost 8 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. Current Sprint Fellows and Projects: Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives Past Fellows: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. |
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122 | stevie |
February 03, 2016 16:23
| about 8 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. Current Sprint Fellows and Projects:
Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives Past Fellows: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. |
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121 | stevie |
February 03, 2016 16:22
| about 8 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. Current Sprint Fellows and Projects:
Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives Past Fellows: May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. |
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120 | stevie |
February 03, 2016 16:21
| about 8 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. Current Sprint Fellows and Projects:
Past Fellows: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives |
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119 | stevie |
February 03, 2016 16:21
| about 8 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. Current Sprint Fellows and Projects:
Past Fellows: May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives |
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118 | stevie |
February 03, 2016 16:20
| about 8 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. Current Sprint Fellows and Projects:
Past Fellows: May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives |
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117 | stevie |
February 03, 2016 16:19
| about 8 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. Current Sprint Fellows and Projects:
Past Fellows: May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives |
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116 | Shannon |
September 14, 2015 20:55
| over 8 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. We currently have an open application period for the following fellowships:
Current fellows include: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives |
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115 | Shannon |
September 14, 2015 18:54
| over 8 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. We currently have an open application period for the following fellowships:
Current fellows include: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives |
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114 | warren |
July 27, 2015 15:52
| almost 9 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. We currently have an open application period for the following fellowships:
Current fellows include: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives |
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113 | ygzstc |
July 23, 2015 15:30
| almost 9 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. We currently have an open application period for the following fellowships:
Current fellows include: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Yagiz will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives |
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112 | ygzstc |
July 09, 2015 15:18
| almost 9 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. We currently have an open application period for the following fellowships:
Current fellows include: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Sutcu will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, he will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives |
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111 | Shannon |
July 08, 2015 19:53
| almost 9 years ago
While anyone may join Public Lab and take part in developing and applying Do-It-Yourself pollution monitoring techniques, the Public Lab non-profit supports peer production for community environmental health under three program areas: Open Land, Open Air, Open Water**. These program areas are assisted by hardware production and distribution through the Kits Initiative. Activities include:
To support this framework, the Public Lab nonprofit has identified three different types of fellowships that the organization hopes to support: Initiative Fellows, Sprint Fellows and Co-Fellows. The following sections include information on current fellows, current fellowship openings and the structure of each fellowship program. Initiative Fellows The role of an Initiative Fellow is to lead the day-to-day management of programmatic hardware and software development in their initiative area, to coordinate with Public Lab’s outreach team on events planning and community engagement, and to participate in monthly meetups and Public Lab’s annual conference. Initiative fellows provide support to community members for tool research and development, connect communities tackling similar issues, and coordinate closely with Public Lab staff. Fellows receive various levels of support from Public Lab including stipends and support for workspace, materials, and travel. Current fellows include:
Sprint Fellows The role of the Sprint Fellow is to support focused, project-based responsibilities in one of the three Initiatives (Open Air, Water and Land), such as overcoming a specific research or development hurdle. These fellowships are designed to be more nimble and based on immediate, concrete needs, whether that be related to a tool or a community-defined need. Sprint Fellows receive stipends to support workshops, travel and workspace for 3-6 month periods. We currently have an open application period for the following fellowships:
Current fellows include: Sreyantha Chary Fellowship: Spectral Workbench macros and recipies May 20-August 20, 2015 By providing a “Recipes” platform for authoring and sharing step-by-step methods and protocols for specific spectrometric tests, from sample collection to preparation, scanning, and comparison, Chary will pilot the idea of stepwise methodological scaffolding and skill-sharing with potential application across Public Lab tools. Yagiz Sutcu Fellowship: Public Lab beta Oil Testing Kit July 13-October 13, 2015 Sutcu will focus on the evaluation of the Oil Testing Kit capabilities to determine the accuracy with which the prototype Oil Testing Kit spectrometer can measure oil reference materials, and to conduct and synthesize results from a multi-user beta-testing program. For the beta-testing program, the fellow will develop and refine written methods for users to analyze samples and assess uploaded user spectra for accuracy and precision. Co-Fellows The Co-Fellows program provides funding and resources for two-person teams to develop and implement projects defined by a community need. Of the two-fellow team, typically one fellow would be actively working on a specific environmental issue and one fellow would come from a technical background. Co-Fellows receive stipends to support the development of their project. ** Read more about each initiative at: http://publiclab.org/wiki/nonprofit-initiatives |
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