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Instructor notes |
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The data used for this lesson are in the figshare repository at: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.1314459
This lesson uses mostly combined.csv
. The 3 other csv files: plots.csv
,
species.csv
and surveys.csv
are only needed for the lesson on databases.
combined.csv
is downloaded directly in the episode "Starting with Data" and
does not need to be downloaded before hand. It however requires that there is a
decent internet connection in the room where the workshop is being taught. To
facilitate the download process, the chunk of code that includes the URL where
the csv file lives, and where the file should go and be named is included in the
code handout (see next paragraph). Using this approach ensures that the file
will be where the lesson expects it to be, and teaches good/reproducible
practice of automating the download. If the learners haven't created the data/
directory and/or are not in the correct working directory, the download.file
command will produce an error. Therefore, it is important to use the stickies at
this point.
The code handout (a link to download it is also available on the top bar of the lesson website) is useful for Data Carpentry workshops. It includes an outline of the lesson content, the text for the challenges, the links for the files that need to be downloaded for the lesson, and pieces of code that may be difficult to type for learners with no programming experience/who are unfamiliar with R's syntax. We encourage you to distribute it to the learners at the beginning of the lesson. As an instructor, we encourage you to do the live coding directly in this file, so the participants can follow along.
Some learners may have previous R installations. On Mac, if a new install is performed, the learner's system will create a symbolic link, pointing to the new install as 'Current.' Sometimes this process does not occur, and, even though a new R is installed and can be accessed via the R console, RStudio does not find it. The net result of this is that the learner's RStudio will be running an older R install. This will cause package installations to fail. This can be fixed at the terminal. First, check for the appropriate R installation in the library;
ls -l /Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/
We are currently using R 3.6.x. If it isn't there, they will need to install it. If it is present, you will need to set the symbolic link to Current to point to the 3.6.x directory:
ln -s /Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/3.6.x /Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Version/Current
Then restart RStudio.
- The main goal here is to help the learners be comfortable with the RStudio interface. We use RStudio because it helps make using R more organized and user friendly.
- The "Why learning R?" section contains suggestions of what you could tell your learners about the benefits of learning R. However, it's best if you can talk here about what has worked for you personally.
- Go very slowly in the "Getting setup section". Make sure everyone is following
along (remind learners to use the stickies). Plan with the helpers at this
point to go around the room, and be available to help. It's important to make
sure that learners are in the correct working directory, and that they create
a
data_raw
(all lowercase) subfolder. - The seeking help section is relatively long, and while it's useful to demonstrate a couple of ways to get help from within R, you may want to mostly point the workshop participants to this useful reference so that they can refer to it after the workshop.
- In the "where to ask for help section?", you may want to emphasize the first point about how workshops are a great way to create community of learners that can help each others during and after the workshop.
- When going over the section on assignments, make sure to pause for at least 30 seconds when asking "What do you think is the current content of the object weight_lb? 126.5 or 220?". For learners with no programming experience, this is a new and important concept.
- Given that the concept of missing data is an important feature of the R language, it is worth spending enough time on it.
The two main goals for this lessons are:
- To make sure that learners are comfortable with working with data frames, and can use the bracket notation to select slices/columns
- To expose learners to factors. Their behavior is not necessarily intuitive, and so it is important that they are guided through it the first time they are exposed to it. The content of the lesson should be enough for learners to avoid common mistakes with them.
- For this lesson make sure that learners are comfortable using pipes.
- There is also sometimes some confusion on what the arguments of
group_by
should be. - This lesson uses the tidyr package to reshape data for plotting
- After this lesson students should be familiar with the spread() and gather() functions available in tidyr
- While working with the example for mutate(), it is difficult to see the "weight" columns on a zoomed in RStudio screen. Including a select() command to select the columns "weight_kg" and "weight_lb" makes it easier to view how the "weight" columns are changed.
- This lesson is a broad overview of ggplot2 and focuses on (1) getting familiar
with the layering system of ggplot2, (2) using the argument
group
in theaes()
function, (3) basic customization of the plots.
- Ideally this lesson is best taught at the end of the workshop (as a capstone example) to illustrate how the tools covered can integrate with each others. Depending on the audience, and the pace of the workshop, it can be shown as a demonstration rather than a typically lesson.
- The explanation of how dplyr's verb syntax is translated into SQL statements, and the section on laziness are optional and don't need to be taught in detail during a workshop. They can be useful after a workshop for learners interested in learning more about the topics or for instructors to answer questions from the workshop participants.
As it stands, the solutions to all the challenges are commented out in the Rmd files. If you want to double check your answer, you can look at the source code of the Rmd files on GitHub.
Show how to use the 'zoom' button to blow up graphs without constantly resizing windows
Sometimes a package will not install, try a different CRAN mirror
- Tools > Global Options > Packages > CRAN Mirror
Alternatively you can go to CRAN and download the package and install from ZIP file
- Tools > Install Packages > set to 'from Zip/TAR'
It is important that R, and the R packages be installed locally, not on a network drive. If a learner is using a machine with multiple users where their account is not based locally this can create a variety of issues (This often happens on university computers). Hopefully the learner will realize these issues before hand, but depending on the machine and how the IT folks that service the computer have things set up, it may be very difficult to impossible to make R work without their help.
If learners are having issues with one package, they may have issues with another. Its often easier to make sure they have all the needed packages installed at one time, rather then deal with these issues over and over. Here is a list of all necessary packages for these lessons.
If you encounter a problem during a workshop, feel free to contact the maintainers by email or open an issue.
For a more in-depth coverage of topics of the workshops, you may want to read "R for Data Science" by Hadley Wickham and Garrett Grolemund.