Description
Book SynopsisThe emerging field of Data Science has had a large impact on science and society. This book explores how one distinguishing feature of Data Science its focus on data collected from social and environmental contexts within which learners often find themselves deeply embedded suggests serious implications for learning and education.
Drawing from theories of learning and identity development in the learning sciences, this volume investigates the impacts of these complex relationships on how learners think about, use, and share data, including their understandings of data in light of history, race, geography, and politics. More than just using real world examples' to motivate students to work with data, this book demonstrates how learners' relationships to data shape how they approach those data with agency, as part of their social and cultural lives. Together, the contributions offer a vision of how the learning sciences can contribute to a more expansive, socially aware
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Situating Data Science—Exploring How Relationships to Data Shape Learning 2. At Home with Data: Family Engagements with Data Involved in Type 1 Diabetes Management 3. Examining Spontaneous Perspective Taking and Fluid Self-to-Data Relationships in Informal Open-Ended Data Exploration 4. Learning at the Intersection of Self and Society: The Family Geobiography as a Context for Data Science Education 5. Authoring Data Stories in a Media Makerspace: Adolescents Developing Critical Data Literacies 6. From Data Collectors to Data Producers: Shifting Students’ Relationship to Data, Lisa Hardy 7. Scripts and Counterscripts in Community-Based Data Science: Participatory Digital Mapping and the Pursuit of a Third Space 8. Learning to Reason with Data: How Did We Get Here and What Do We Know? 9. Educating Data Scientists and Data Literate Citizens for a New Generation of Data