NASA Openscapes Champions Program, Spring 2026

event
champions
An Openscapes Cohort to learn open science approaches for your daily workflows with NASA airborne and other suborbital data
Author

Openscapes and NASA

Published

April 20, 2026

Join us to do better science in less time, together

This is a professional development and leadership opportunity for people doing and supporting research using NASA Earthdata collected from suborbital sampling to explore open data science practices and make incremental and sustainable change, no matter where you are starting from. The 2026 NASA Suborbital Openscapes Champions Cohort will run in June 2026. We will meet as a Cohort via Zoom four times over one month.

Applications are open! Jump to how to apply, below.

Openscapes is an approach and a movement that helps researchers find each other and feel empowered to conduct data-intensive science (Lowndes et al. 2019; Robinson and Lowndes 2022). Since 2019, Openscapes has mentored over 600 researchers at universities across the US and at NASA and NOAA, helping to shift institutional culture to develop climate solutions with open science (Lowndes et al. 2024).

NASA Earthdata has volumes of remote sensing data collected by platforms in space, air, water, and land. Substantial suborbital data is collected from airborne sampling via airplanes, ground networks, and field sampling on land, boats, and buoys. Suborbital science teams are teams that create and use suborbital data via NASA programs like EVS-4. The science teams use suborbital data to ground-truth satellite data, as well as to conduct other awesome research like studying Arctic coastlines via the FORTE mission and glaciers and ice sheets via the Snow4Flow mission. Read about how Openscapes supports NASA suborbital science teams.

Program details

Openscapes Champions is a remote-by-design mentorship program for researchers to explore open data science practices. Core lessons include open mindset, GitHub for publishing and project management, coding and data strategies, and team culture. To support EVS-4 teams, this cohort will also focus on documentation strategies for suborbital data.

The 2026 NASA Suborbital Openscapes Champions Cohort will run in June 2026. We will meet as a Cohort via Zoom four times over one month for 1.5 hours.

  • Dates: Wednesdays, June 3, 10, 17, 24.

  • Times: 10:00 - 11:30 am Pacific Time

    • Where: remotely, via Zoom.

    • Who: Researchers (postdoctoral fellows, graduate students, principal investigators, other academic researchers) and people supporting research with NASA airborne and suborbital data. Preference will be given to EVS-4 and SoAR teams if we reach capacity.

    • Cost: Free. This opportunity is supported by NASA through a contract to Openscapes.

    • Expected time commitment: 2.5hrs/week for 1 month is an expected time commitment. This accounts for 1.5 hours/week of synchronous Zoom calls, plus self-organized time

For more information about the Openscapes and our Champions Program, see “Openscapes as a mechanism for Crossing the Chasm between idea and adoption in science” (slides) and What to Expect. For stories from over 25 past Openscapes Champions Cohorts from NASA Earthdata, NOAA Fisheries, other government agencies and academic groups, please browse these blog posts.

How to apply

To nominate yourself, please fill out the nomination form by May 24. Open science is collaborative! We encourage you to sign up with a colleague or two – it is more fun to participate together and you have more accountability. You don’t need to be working on the same project, only an interest in improving workflows.

Questions? Contact hello @ openscapes.org.

logo of NASA on left with Openscapes logo on right

References

Lowndes, Julia S. Stewart, Halley E. Froehlich, Allison Horst, et al. 2019. “Supercharge Your Research: A Ten-Week Plan for Open Data Science.” Nature, ahead of print, October 31. https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-019-03335-4.
Lowndes, Julia S. Stewart, Anna M. Holder, Emily H. Markowitz, and Kathryn Doering Corey Clatterbuck Amanda L. Bradford. 2024. “Shifting Institutional Culture to Develop Climate Solutions with Open Science.” Ecology and Evolution, ahead of print, April 31. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.11341.
Robinson, Erin, and Julia S. Stewart Lowndes. 2022. The Openscapes Flywheel: A Framework for Managers to Facilitate and Scale Inclusive Open Science Practices. October 10. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.31223/X5CQ02.