In partnership with the Open Scholarship Commons, UW-QUAL workshops are free, one-day, hands-on tutorials that instruct students in the use of ATLAS.ti. The Advanced Skills Workshop is open to all UW students, faculty and staff interested in deepening their qualitative multi-method data analysis skills who have taken the previous ATLAS.ti Training – Basics Workshop or have basic experience working in ATLAS.ti. This workshop will focus specifically on analyzing already coded data, and students are welcome to bring their already coded projects to the workshop or use a provided demo dataset.
Attendees are welcome to come with their own device loaded with Atlas.ti 24 (subscription software or free trial) or they may use one of our OSC laptops with the software preloaded.
ATLAS.ti workshops are taught by Dr. Kristin Beima-Sofie, a Senior Research Scientist in the Department of Global Health with more than 10 years of experience working and mentoring in ATLAS.ti.
Workshop details
Date: Friday, October 25, 2024
Time: 10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. PDT
Location: Suzzallo Library, Open Scholarship Commons Presentation Space, 1st Floor
Instructor: Kristin Beima-Sofie, PhD, MPH, is a qualitative researcher within behavioral and implementation science. Her research primarily focuses on optimizing HIV treatment and prevention for women, children and adolescents.
Registering for the workshop
The workshop is limited to 25 people, and registration is required, so please sign up for the Atlas.ti workshop as soon as possible. We also maintain a wait list and it is important to contact qual@uw.edu if there is a need to cancel your registration so that we can offer your spot to someone on the wait list. QUAL prioritizes registrants in the following order: UW Law students, Ocean Nexus Center fellows, QUAL concentration students, all other students, faculty/staff.
Preparing for the ATLAS.ti workshop
Laptops with ATLAS.ti software installed will be provided to registrants, courtesy of the Open Scholarship Commons. Attendees do not need to bring computers nor register for the software individually.