Onboarding a Team
This page is for coordinators and project leads who want to introduce the playbook to a new team or community group.
Where to Start by Role
Rather than sharing the full playbook with a new team, start with the chapter most relevant to their immediate task.
| Role | Recommended starting point |
|---|---|
| Annotator | Training and Guidelines, then the relevant modality chapter |
| Voice recorder | Speech Data |
| Reviewer / quality checker | Data Quality Assurance and Validation |
| Coordinator | Cost and Resource Planning → Annotation Design |
| Linguist | Annotation Design → Inclusive and Bias-Aware Design |
| Dataset release lead | Documentation and Governance → Dataset Lifecycle |
First-Session Structure
A single 60–90 minute orientation session is usually enough to get a team started:
- Walk through the relevant chapter together (screen share or printed copy)
- Work through one concrete example from the actual project — not an abstract sample
- Run a short practice task and discuss any questions before independent work begins
Onboarding Materials to Prepare
- Link (or printout) of the relevant chapter
- 3–5 real annotation or recording examples from your project
- Contact details for who to reach with tool or task questions
- Offline copy of materials for contributors without reliable internet (see Inclusive Access)
Checking Readiness
Before a contributor starts independent work, confirm they can:
- Navigate to the relevant playbook section without help
- Correctly identify the label or action for at least three practice examples
- Reach their point of contact if something is unclear
Contributors who cannot pass a short readiness check benefit from a second orientation rather than starting at full scale.