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Building a personal website can be an important form of public communication for researchers, as a place to showcase their work and communicate to a wider audience. Personal websites can host blogs, portfolios, code, digital gardens, and all sorts of content that can widen the reach (and demonstrate openness and/or 'learning in public') of researchers.
However, many people have different ways of approaching or building a personal website.
And I guess there's the question of whether making your own team/lab website would be outside the scope of this, as there's also a lot of resources for that, again for jekyll:
Title
Personal Websites
Guide
Guide for Communication
Draft
No response
Summary of proposed chapter
Building a personal website can be an important form of public communication for researchers, as a place to showcase their work and communicate to a wider audience. Personal websites can host blogs, portfolios, code, digital gardens, and all sorts of content that can widen the reach (and demonstrate openness and/or 'learning in public') of researchers.
However, many people have different ways of approaching or building a personal website.
Based off of a discussion with @SaraVilla, @gedankenstuecke, @srtee, @ha0ye, @sgibson91, @RichardJActon on Slack – this is to kickstart a new chapter addition to the Guide for Communication on building a personal website.
Resources
Who can help?
Anyone with an interest and/or experience in building a personal website!
Updates
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