Several impactful results have been delivered by the project:
1. Building an ontology of transferable skills for an open science and innovation to support discovering of training gaps and opportunities, leaded by SAIA, and translate it into a set of career cards describing each of the skills included and an overview of the levels of competence for each skill and suggest how the skill can be developed through doctoral training and beyond. Starting from a review on existing researchers’ skills frameworks and how they address open science and innovation, Discovery Learning skills ontology was created through collaboration within the project consortium and consultations with external experts. As main conclusion, the skills were organised around the concept of innovation as reaching impact from science and technology; this is a good added value to already existing frameworks.
2. A programme of webinars in different topics related to open science and innovation, which covered all categories of transferable skills included in Discovery Learning ontology. Nineteen webinars were organised by all partners implementing enriched activities with practitioners, from October 2021 to May 2022, open to any PhD candidate and early-stage researcher (ESR) at international and multidisciplinary levels. 812 people registered to these webinars, and 539 participated in them from several countries in Europe, Asia and Africa. Satisfaction from participants was very high, and some discoveries were achieved towards the future training of transferable skills for people with highest academic qualification.
We also experimented with what we called real-work-based learning miniprojects: learning which not only belongs to real projects or cases but also, they are happening in real-time (they are alive as the PhD candidates and ESRs work in them). This activity was not so relevant in terms of numbers (23 people registered, and just 6 went through all steps); but it was the most disruptive educational activity tested.
Finally, 3 seminars were organised at UIO (2) and La Salle Campus in Madrid (1). Experience and outcomes from all these training activities was leveraged via surveys and in-depth interviews to participants and in-depth reflections by the educators and practitioners.
All lessons learnt have been published as a pedagogic research leaded by RTDI, and data has been made open. Additionally, they have been compiled into one of the main results from Discovery Learning towards sustainability of its impact: an open platform of what we have called Open Educational Experiences (OEEs). OEEs are personal and specific strategies from educators working with different learners in different contexts, shared openly via Internet in such a way that they can be easily found, understood, assessed and reused / recycled by other educators. This has been the baseline for a continuation proposal, Dived Learning, which is pending evaluation.
3. As a result of this compilation of work, a White Paper has been edited by FECYT to provide guidelines for improving doctoral education and its effectiveness in terms of innovated methodologies and the implementation of an agenda of transferable skills related to Open Science and Innovation.