Citizen Science Research Design and Methods

1. Citizen Science Methodologies

This module educates learners on the diverse methodologies within citizen science, using terminology and real-world examples to illustrate these concepts. By exploring case studies like eBird for data collection and Galaxy Zoo for data processing, the module showcases the impact and breadth of citizen science projects. It culminates by providing an overview of various citizen science approaches, including crowdsourcing, curriculum-based projects, and community science, to equip learners with the knowledge to apply these methods in their work.

Module description: 

What?

How?

Why?

Introduction to CS

Explaining how we are going to cover the topic of citizen science research methodologies through examples of different types of citizen science projects

Explaining to the learner why it is worth following the course

Example one - eBird (data collection)

The story of eBird and how it became the world’s largest biodiversity-related science projects, with more than 100 million bird sightings contributed annually by eBirders around the world and an average participation growth rate of approximately 20% year on year

Demonstration of what can be achieved with crowdsourcing of data collection

Example two – Galaxy Zoo and Zooniverse (data processing)

The story of Galaxy Zoo and how it has mobilised volunteers to perform millions of classifications of galaxies and resulted in over 450 publications

Demonstration of what can be achieved with crowdsourcing of data processing

Example three - FoldIt (data processing through gamification)

The story of FoldIt and how players have contributed to advanced research on human health, cutting-edge bioengineering, and the inner workings of biology

Demonstration of what can be achieved with curriculum-based citizen science projects

Example four - the Give Youth a Voice project and the Mass Experiment in Denmark

The story of two projects in Denmark – one about mental health and young people and one about plastic pollution involving 57.000 school children

Demonstration of what can be achieved with citizen science projects that involve young people/school children

Overview of citizen science methodologies and what they accomplish: crowdsourcing (data collection and/or data processing), curriculum-based projects, and community science

Bringing the stories together and elaborating on key terms for citizen science methodology: crowdsourcing and volunteered thinking/computing (data collection and/or data processing), curriculum-based citizen science (formal and informal science education), and community science

Helping participants to organise information about individual examples and enabling them to use relevant terminology


Overview slide (available in the slide deck):
Summary slide and overview of some CS areas