38
ResearchPages: home | people | groups | features | help | faq | contact us

GENIEfy Network

Creating a Grid ENabled Integrated Earth system modelling framework for the community

GENIE Training Workshop

On the 24th and 25th July 2007, GENIEfy ran the second annual GENIE training workshop in the iLab at the University of East Anglia. The event was supported by the National Institute for Environmental e-Science (NIEeS), Cambridge. The aims of the traning workshop were as follows:

Tim and Bob introduce the first lab experiment
Tim and Bob introduce the first lab experiment

Programme

The workshop consisted of talks, lab and discussion sessions:

Getting GENIE up and running
Getting GENIE up and running

Getting to grips with the atmospheric diffusion parameters
Getting to grips with the atmospheric diffusion parameters

Achievements

The GENIE training workshop welcomed approximately 25 ‘trainees’ from the UK and abroad (Europe and the US and Japan). As well as the training provided in runnning GENIE, they left having built contacts with key members of the GENIEfy project and other GENIE users, strengthening the GENIE ‘network’.

Tim and Bob get stuck in to the GENIE wiki
Tim and Bob get stuck in to the GENIE wiki. An unexpected benefit of the training workshop was the impetus provided to module authors and current developers to contribute to the much-needed GENIE documentation.

In running the GENIE workshop we set out to provide a good introduction to GENIE for novice users and useful sessions for more advanced users. Providing sessions that could suit both advanced users and novices who were new to unix, not to mention GENIE, was a challenge! However, in general the feedback we received was very positive (see below) and the sessions we ran were very well received.

One particular success of the workshop was the promotion of a ‘hands on’ attitude in the GENIE network: as a community modelling project. the boundary between ‘developer’ and ‘user’ is necessarily and beneficially blurred, as were the roles of ‘trainer’ and ‘trainee’ in the workshop.

Gethin explains the beauty of Subversion
Gethin explains the beauty of Subversion

Tangible outcomes from the workshop are as follows:

Feedback

We didn’t reveive as much ‘formal’ feedback as we had hoped, but talking informally with people during and after the event, we found that most or all of the trainees found the workshop extremely useful and left with improved knowledge of GENIE and the GENIE ‘network’.

One common issue to many of the trainees was the lack of ‘scientific overview’ talks for some of the modules. We would have liked to provide such talks in the workshop but lack of time, and lack of availability of some module experts prevented us from doing so. We will attempt to improve on this for next year.

Lab session
A full iLab. We weren’t quite sure what to do with the toy electric guitars!

Improvements for next time

As well as providing more scientific content on each of the modules, we came across other unexpected issues which we plan to solve for any future training workshops, mostly associated with software, and particularly the limitation of not having administrator access to the lab machines (a problem we faced at all possible venues for the workshop). In particular:

Acknowledgments

Without the help and support of the following people, the GENIE training workshop wouldn’t have been possible. We are in their debt.

© 2012 all rights reserved.