Play 12 - Create templates to support metadata usage

Support play for intermediary organizations: Create templates and guides to support metadata standards and documentation.

Metadata, as a tool for #findability, #interoperability, and understanding, may be one of the first technical components that data stewards learn and have to make decisions regarding. Yet, there are few if any succinct and useful metadata guides written for community environmental data stewards, specifically. This support work is essential: transparent data provenance is vital in any type of environmental regulation. There is an opportunity for intermediary organizations to create a suite of metadata support, pulling from existing resources, and adapting the metadata formats and standards to fit the needs and contexts of community environmental data stewards. This suite could entail:

🌱 Each play stems from a takeaway from an case study, workshop, or other learning source.

Takeaway: The technical design of a data system can, and should, reflect the data user’s needs to unlock the value of the data.
The technical aspects of data management can often be the most difficult to tailor to stewards’ needs. Data storage requires a level of digital literacy above the average person’s, digital infrastructure can be expensive, and customized systems or features require even more funding. Open source solutions may be available, but less findable or usable to the average user. Oftentimes, environmental data stewards are left with clunky or unnecessary technical systems that don’t correspond with their data sharing or use needs. Recognizing this difficulty and misalignment, we’ve outlined methods to determine the highest priority needs in a technical model and make decisions accordingly, as well as an opportunity for intermediary organizations to support interoperability of any technical data system.

Source: Community Data Playbook (Full report)