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Autore principale: Kahn, Jennifer
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2020
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Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1242251
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author Kahn, Jennifer
author_facet Kahn, Jennifer
Kahn, Jennifer
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Learning at the Intersection of Self and Society: the Family Geobiography as a Context for Data Science Education Kahn, Jennifer Data Visualization Visual Aids Story Telling Genealogy Data Use Public Libraries Middle School Students High School Students African American Students Migration Workshops Geography Open large-scale datasets (LSDS) and data visualization technologies are new cultural tools that have potential to inform public dialogue and learning about important socioeconomic and scientific matters, particularly if the data is used to consider both personal and shared experiences. This paper reports on a design study in which diverse middle and high school youth in a free summer workshop at an urban public library were asked to model their family geobiographies, or their personal family migration stories, with socioeconomic LSDS. Youth represented family decision-making and social conditions that might have motivated family movements with online, dynamic data modeling and mapping tools (Gapminder.org; SocialExplorer.com). The qualitative video analysis examined participants' experiences and learning in storytelling and modeling the family geobiography, focusing on multimodal talk-in-interaction to understand how the study design engaged learners' capacities, histories, and imagined futures in relation to the LSDS and supported learning about oneself and society. Grounded examples from two family cases are used to illustrate how participants placed their families and selves into data ontologies and the role of family members in composing storylines.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1242251
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2020
record_format eric
spellingShingle Learning at the Intersection of Self and Society: the Family Geobiography as a Context for Data Science Education
Kahn, Jennifer
Data
Visualization
Visual Aids
Story Telling
Genealogy
Data Use
Public Libraries
Middle School Students
High School Students
African American Students
Migration
Workshops
Geography
Learning at the Intersection of Self and Society: the Family Geobiography as a Context for Data Science Education Kahn, Jennifer Data Visualization Visual Aids Story Telling Genealogy Data Use Public Libraries Middle School Students High School Students African American Students Migration Workshops Geography Open large-scale datasets (LSDS) and data visualization technologies are new cultural tools that have potential to inform public dialogue and learning about important socioeconomic and scientific matters, particularly if the data is used to consider both personal and shared experiences. This paper reports on a design study in which diverse middle and high school youth in a free summer workshop at an urban public library were asked to model their family geobiographies, or their personal family migration stories, with socioeconomic LSDS. Youth represented family decision-making and social conditions that might have motivated family movements with online, dynamic data modeling and mapping tools (Gapminder.org; SocialExplorer.com). The qualitative video analysis examined participants' experiences and learning in storytelling and modeling the family geobiography, focusing on multimodal talk-in-interaction to understand how the study design engaged learners' capacities, histories, and imagined futures in relation to the LSDS and supported learning about oneself and society. Grounded examples from two family cases are used to illustrate how participants placed their families and selves into data ontologies and the role of family members in composing storylines.
title Learning at the Intersection of Self and Society: the Family Geobiography as a Context for Data Science Education
topic Data
Visualization
Visual Aids
Story Telling
Genealogy
Data Use
Public Libraries
Middle School Students
High School Students
African American Students
Migration
Workshops
Geography
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1242251