2. Data Expeditions are quests to map uncharted territory, discover hidden
stories and solve unsolved mysteries in the Land of Data. As part of a
team you’ll tackle a problem, answer a question or work on a project.
We help you to get started and it’s up to you to decide where you go
4. Form groups of 7-10
2 computers per group
Take a lot of notes (also on coloured post-its)
Appoint a speaker
5. Following the next slides, in 90 minutes you will:
1. Identify questions and problems to learn more about in your territory
2. Find a related project on your national website (EU Cohesion Policy funded projects)
3. Learn to browse and read what’s on your national website
4.Find other helpful data sources and develop the selected topic
5. Describe the details of the research you want to bring forward by filling out the Canvas on the
next slide
6. Using the Canvas, present your project in front of the class and CONVINCE THE OTHERS IT’S
THE BEST
7. Select the project that the whole class will bring forward
8. Form a definitive working group and assign yourselves to roles to organise the work of the
coming weeks
6. Brief description of your
civic monitoring
research (summarise
the research into 140
characters and choose
5 keywords to describe
it)
Contextual information:
what data did you find on
your chosen topic? (See
slide: find contextual data
and information)
Chosen project and topic
(name, brief description,
topic)
Experts on the topic to be
involved from the territory
(associations, public
authorities, other experts,
journalists etc.)
Communication format and
engagement strategy
(Which format do you
choose for communicating
your research and which
strategies do you
implement to involve the
local community. See slide:
choose the right format)
Additional research: choose 3 additional research
methods (see slide: choose a research method)
Value for the community: how will your research have an impact on your territory?
What effects and further developments could your research trigger? Which categories
of people could it interest?
9. Are there critical issues of particular significance
for development in YOUR territory?
Get ideas from cohesion policy topics
Digital agenda
Environment
Cities and rural areas
Business competition
Culture and tourism
Energy
Social inclusion
Infancy and the elderly
Training
Employment
Local government reinforcement
Research and innovation
Transport
10. For example…
● major infrastructure
● a news issue
● a social emergency
● a major public investment
Search online: Related local NEWS,
other web NEWS, SOCIAL MEDIA,
websites of the municipality, province,
region
Discuss: from personal experience or
from a point of view of the local
situation. The speaker organises the
discussion.
Write: take key points and words from
the discussion
Are there other critical issues of particular significance
for development in YOUR territory?
12. 20 minutes
EXPLORE YOUR TERRITORY ON YOUR WEBISTE
IN 20 MINUTES
AND TAKE NOTES OF YOUR FINDINGS
Follow the suggestions of the next 2 slides
13. HOW TO EXPLORE XXXX?
● FOLLOW THE TERRITORIES. See how much money your municipality has received
and for what areas, find out if it was used to make improvements.
● FOLLOW A TOPIC. Which areas have received the most finance in your territory? Or,
which topics interest you? Have they received sufficient funding? For which
projects? As a whole, what has been financed for which area? How do we find out
whether the investments have improved the territory?
● FOLLOW THE PROJECTS. Are there particularly large or important projects? Why are
they important? Which organisations are involved and how are the payments going?
(… are there anomalies, for example?) What other information can we find out about
the projects? What economic, social and cultural repercussions does the project
have for the territory?
● FOLLOW THE ORGANISATIONS. Start from organisations that hold a certain weight in
the territory. Municipality, region, certain businesses. Who ran the works for that
infrastructure? Who operates the training programmes? How many and which
initiatives were funded? Do the organisations collaborate with others? Did they work
well?
14. ● How was the money distributed BY TOPIC?
● How was the money distributed BY MUNICIPALITY / TERRITORY?
● Were there INDIVIDUAL PROJECTS of significant financial scale?
● At what stage is the FUNDING for these projects?
● How was the cash distributed within certain areas to the IMPLEMENTING
ORGANISATIONS? Who is receiving the cash? Are there organisations operating
multiple projects?
FOLLOW THE MONEY!
16. 10 minutes
PREPARE A LIST OF OTHER DATA AND
INFORMATION HELPFUL FOR UNDERSTANDING
THE RESEARCH IN 10 MINUTES
Follow the suggestions of the next 2 slides
17. FIND CONTEXTUAL DATA AND INFORMATION
● NATIONAL INSTITUTIONAL WEBSITES (Ministries, Parliament, European Union)
● LOCAL INSTITUTIONAL WEBSITES (Municipality, Province, Region)
● RESEARCH INSTITUTE WEBSITES (example: Istat [Italian National Institute of
Statistics])
● SPECIFIC NATIONAL OR LOCAL PORTALS
● ONLINE NEWSPAPERS (national, local)
18. ● Research other secondary data (official documents, academic journals, magazines, bylaws of
organisations, official press releases, websites)
● Questionnaires (questionnaires distributed to users of services, online forms, closed or open questions)
● Interviews (structured, semistructured, unstructured)
● Focus groups (group interviews, with questions and interaction between participants)
● Quantitative analysis (analysis of different variables, crossed datasets for understanding correlation
between phenomena)
● Diaries & reportage (measure actions, document with photos and videos)
● Longitudinal analyses of a case study (in-depth case study, applying various techniques)
● Online research methods (network analysis, digital ethnography, scraping and various techniques for
extracting online data and metrics)
● Content analysis (systematic analysis of text corpora for understanding recurring themes)
CHOOSE AN ADDITIONAL RESEARCH METHOD
20. 10 minutes
In 10 MINUTES, CHOOSE THE TARGET FOR THE
RESEARCH AND THINK ABOUT HOW TO INVOLVE IT
Follow the suggestions of the next 2 slides
21. What is the aim of your project?
● provoke a feeling
● trigger action
● create awareness of a topic
● participate in a public authority decision
● for all citizens
● for a group interested in a
specific topic
● for a public organisation
● for a private organisation
Who is it for?
22. Based on the choice made in the previous slide,
identify the most suitable format for involving the community in the
research:
● a website
● video
● infographics
● comicstrip
● timeline
● animation
● song
● radio
● speak at city council meetings
● public conference
● special newspaper insertion
● videoclip
● performance
● school display
24. 15 minutes
IN 15 MINUTES PUT ALL OF YOUR NOTES TOGETHER
ON THE CANVAS YOU RECEIVED AT THE BEGINNING
Follow the suggestions of the next 2 slides
25. 3 minutes
EACH GROUP PRESENTS THEIR PROJECT IN 3 MINUTES
IN FRONT OF THE TEACHER AND THE REST OF THE CLASS.
THE BEST PROJECT WILL BE CHOSEN FOR THE ENTIRE
CLASS TO WORK ON
27. Divide into roles for the selected project
(also see the slides in the homework section of the lesson page)
Project Manager
A good organiser and coordinator, good at managing time and people, to circulate the
information between the work group, teachers and the ASOC team
Storyteller: a good communicator, to choose the spin of the
story and handle the presentation to the public
Blogger: incisive writer, to produce articles with impact
Social media manager and PR: social media are his or her
thing, to generate attention and engagement
Analyst: enjoys managing data, text, to support
communication
Coder: team hacker, to find solutions to collect, clean and
organise data
Designer: graphics, video and media editing wizard
Head of Research
a born researcher: discovers important details,
asks the right questions, discovers and crosses information