STARDIT
Standardised Data on Initiatives (STARDIT) is a standardised way to share information about who was involved in an initiative, what was done, what was learned and any impacts which occurred. It is open-access, is free to use, and data is viewable and editable by anyone by anyone.[1]
STARDIT reports can include data about which tasks were done by different people, and can be updated at any point to include outcomes and impacts.
STARDIT provides a way for anyone to collaborate on describing collective action. It can be used across different areas of human knowledge, from health research, environmental research and education, to government policies, manufacturing, or the arts.
STARDIT enables multiple categories of data to be reported in a standardised way across disciplines and languages. Because the data is organised into common shared data fields across disciplines, it makes it easier to compare initiatives in a way which has not been possible in the past, including using both human and machine readable linked-data.[1]
Create a new STARDIT Report
Open this link to create STARDIT report with the unique number 0202412081750
Each new report has a unique number generated based on when it is created - you can refresh the page to generate a new number
Read existing STARDIT Reports
Open this link to read all existing STARDIT reports or search for keywords in the search box (top right)
Edit existing STARDIT Reports
To edit an existing STARDIT report - navigate to the report you'd like to edit and hit 'Edit with form' on the top right - this will give an easy to use interface. Please note - hitting the 'edit' tab allows you to edit the code in wiki markup.
Learn more about creating and editing reports
Learn more about STARDIT and find instructions for creating and editing reports here: ScienceForAll.World/STARDIT
About STARDIT
Over 100 people from multiple disciplines and countries have been involved in co-designing STARDIT since 2019, using a participatory action research paradigm.
The charity 'Science for All' is hosting the co-design process of STARDIT pro-bono, and Wikimedia Australia is hosting the STARDIT data and online infrastructure pro bono.
Learn about the partnership between Wikimedia Australia and STARDIT here.
Read the peer-reviewed article about STARDIT here to learn more about the project: doi.org/10.1186/s40900-022-00363-9
Please note, in some cases, members of the STARDIT Moderation Committee may transparently change content in order to uphold the Values of the STARDIT project, and Wiki Journal Editorial Boards may also give transparent advice.
Learn more about how to get involved in the STARDIT project here.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Nunn, Jack S.; Shafee, Thomas; Chang, Steven; Stephens, Richard; Elliott, Jim; Oliver, Sandy; John, Denny; Smith, Maureen et al. (2022-07-19), "Standardised data on initiatives—STARDIT: Beta version", Research Involvement and Engagement 8 (1): 31, doi:10.1186/s40900-022-00363-9, ISSN 2056-7529, PMC PMC9294764, PMID 35854364, https://doi.org/10.1186/s40900-022-00363-9