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92 changes: 73 additions & 19 deletions docs/worksheets/worksheet_2.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -11,56 +11,110 @@ Work through the prompts in order. Please use a decision-making method “to dec
## Introductions (approx. time: 10 mins total or "1-2 breaths" per prompt)
Please share the following information about yourself. Each team member should type their response in the space below (create more as needed).

- **Name:** [Your Name]
- **Pronouns:** [Your Pronouns]
- **Expertise:** [Your Expertise]
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** [Describe your unique skill or interest in environmental data science]
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** [Share one thing you observed about yourself]
- **Name:** Phil Two Eagle
- **Pronouns:**
- **Expertise:** Executive Direction Sicangu Lakota Treaty Council, Sicangu Climate Center, Maka Sitomniye
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** The ability to bring people together
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** I am mainly an introvert, I try to live by our ancestors, to have a vision and guide our people to it.

---
- **Name:** [Your Name]
- **Pronouns:** [Your Pronouns]
- **Expertise:** [Your Expertise]
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** [Describe your unique skill or interest in environmental data science]
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** [Share one thing you observed about yourself]
- **Name:** Brian Yandell
- **Pronouns:** he/him
- **Expertise:** Emeritus Professor UW-Madison
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** Collaboration
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** I'm good at networking and connecting people.

---
- **Name:** [Your Name]
- **Pronouns:** [Your Pronouns]
- **Expertise:** [Your Expertise]
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** [Describe your unique skill or interest in environmental data science]
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** [Share one thing you observed about yourself]
- **Name:** Valerie Janis
- **Pronouns:** she/her
- **Expertise:** Archivist, conversation biology, natural resource management
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** Curation and organization of data and collections.
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** It's very overstimulating to be in large groups.

---
- **Name:** [Your Name]
- **Name:** Paula Antoine
- **Pronouns:**
- **Expertise:** Head of Land Office at RST, Sicangu Climate Center, works a lot in the communities, knows where to find TEK, Traditional knowledge, coding
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** Pay close attention to details and interactions between people
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** I carry on too much

- **Name:** Justina White Eyes
- **Pronouns:**
- **Expertise:** IT at Native Biodata Consortium
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** data analysis
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** I am an introvert, so it was very overstimulating.
-
- **Name:** Patrisse Vasek
- **Pronouns:** she/they
- **Expertise:** Yankton ST THPO, natural disaster modeling, data input, GIS, R, data sovereignty, intertribal data sharing
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** data processing and outreach
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** Seeing everyone coalesce and figuring out what I can contribute.

- **Name:** Lilly Jones-Sanovia
- **Pronouns:** [Your Pronouns]
- **Expertise:** [Your Expertise]
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** [Describe your unique skill or interest in environmental data science]
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** [Share one thing you observed about yourself]

- **Name:** Jeff Weber
- **Pronouns:** he/him
- **Expertise:** Unidata (UCAR), Sovereign Data Network
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** Data
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** I don't like polarity exercises

- **Name:** Conrad Begay
- **Pronouns:**
- **Expertise:** Pre-engineering instructor at Navajo Tech, outreach, programming (IT and CS degrees), enrolled in EE graduate program, IOT, wirelesss interconnected sensors
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** System Administration, various programming languages
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** I like silence.

- **Name:** Naupaka Zimmerman
- **Pronouns:** he/him
- **Expertise:** Associate Professor of Biology, bioinformatics, teaching
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** Learned to learn quickly
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** Thinking about the difference between internal and external processing.

- **Name:** Monica Cardones
- **Pronouns:** she/her
- **Expertise:** PhD student, works for the government
- **Environmental Data Science Superpower:** I range by motions, needs, and requirements, very resourceful, challenging myself to solve problems.
- **Reflection on Polarities Exercise:** Seeing that some people don't enjoy eye contact.

---
- Continue adding more team members following the same format, with a line break after each person.
---
## Research Question: Innovation for Inclusion or Computation (approx. time: 5-10 mins)
Write the research question your team selected in the space below. Feel free to revise the original question.

- [Insert research question here]
- How can data tools and environmental data science be used to continue to preserve and protect traditional and inherent ecological knowledge through languages and culture.
-


## Project Title (approx. time: 5-10 mins)
Craft a catchy title for your team’s project. Think of something that would grab attention at a conference or in a headline.

- [Insert title here]
- Protecting and Preserving Traditional and Inherent Ecological Knowledge through Data Sovereignty


## Promoting Resilience and Adaptation
Describe how your proposed project aligns with the Summit's themes of resilience and adaptation. Please provide 1-2 sentences that clearly connect your project's goals or methods to these themes.

- [Insert your response here]
- Data sovereignty guidelines for Tribes.
- Indigenous languages holds many of these answers.
- Raising awareness amongst grassroots people.
- Developing relationships of trust before any sharing can even occur.
- Developing protocols within a Tribal context. This may be different for different Tribal Nations


## Choosing Big Data Sets
Explore potential data sets for your project's topic from the [data library](https://cu-esiil.github.io/data-library/). List your options below, organizing them by whether they represent the system you're studying (e.g., deciduous forests) or the disruption to it (e.g., wildfire). Then discuss your choices and indicate your final selections.
- Local Context is being integrated into Cyverse with warnings for sensitive data sets.
- Murktu also allows labels and restrictions on data sets. It doesn't handle numerical data however.
- Traditional knowledge cannot be open data.
- There are long-standing oral traditions, data is memorized rather than written down.
- Indigenous peoples hold and create their own data; co-creation is not an appropriate term. Sharing products from data is the choice of the Nations that hold
that data.


### Draft Potential Data Sets
- **System Being Perturbed/Disrupted:**
Expand Down