These slides provide resources for real, interactive, and fun data faculty can bring into the classroom for great discussions and paper assignments designed to get students thinking critically. You don't need to be a numbers guru to do it! These slides also emphasize the value of data and numbers to students in getting great jobs and in understanding the world around them.
Science 7 - LAND and SEA BREEZE and its Characteristics
Data in The Classroom: It's Not Just for Nerds Anymore!
1. Data in the Classroom:
It’s not just for nerds
anymore!
May 8, 2012
Linda Detterman
Lynette Hoelter
ICPSR -
Institute for Social Research
2. Session Outline
• Defining “quantitative literacy (QL)” and
“data”
• Why the emphasis on quantitative
literacy?
• “But, I teach English…
– …. I don‟t „do‟ data”
– …. my students don‟t „do‟ data”
– …. what does quantitative literacy mean
for me?”
• Tools for incorporating data in the
classroom
• Evidence of effectiveness from
social sciences
3. Defining Quantitative
Literacy/Reasoning, Numeracy
“„Statistical literacy, quantitative literacy, numeracy – under
the hood, it is what do we want people to be able to do: Read
tables and graphs and understand English statements that
have numbers in them. That‟s a good start,‟ said Milo
Schield, a professor of statistics at Augsburg College and a
vice president of the National Numeracy Network.
Shield was dismayed to find that, in a survey of his new
students, 44 percent could not read a simple 100 percent row
table and about a quarter could not accurately interpret a
scatter plot of adult heights and weights.”
Chandler, Michael Alison. What is Quantitative
Literacy?, Washington Post, Feb. 5, 2009
4. • Skills learned & used within a context
• Skills:
– Reading and interpreting tables or
graphs and to calculating percentages
and the like
– Working within a scientific model
(variables, hypotheses, etc.)
– Understanding and critically evaluating
numbers presented in everyday lives
– Evaluating arguments based on data
– Knowing what kinds of data might be
useful in answering particular questions
• A straightforward example of a
definition/skill list: Samford University
5. What do we mean by “data”?
• Definitions differ by context. For example:
– Citing another author who supports your point
– Analysis of newspaper articles, blogs, Twitter
feeds, commercials, etc. looking for themes
– The result of an in-depth interview or observation
– Information from medical tests, experiments, and
other scientific exercises
• For this presentation, “data” refers to
summary information presented numerically in
graphs, charts, or tables and the underlying
survey results.
6. Sources of Data
• Administrative records (e.g., human
resource files, police records)
• Census and other government data
collections
• Individuals responding to a survey
– Highly standardized
– Recorded (“coded”) as numbers and
these numbers can be used in
combination to say something about the
group of people who responded
7. Why is QL Important?
• Critical for a democratic society
(Steen 2001)
– Informed citizenry – must be able to
make sense of information coming
from multiple sources.
– Use of evidence in making decisions
and evaluating arguments.
9. Why QL Across the Curriculum?
• “Quantitative literacy largely determines an individual‟s
capacity to control his or her quality of life and to
participate effectively in social decision-making.
• Educational policy and practice have fallen behind the
rapidly changing data-oriented needs of modern
society, and undergraduate education is the appropriate
locus of leadership for making the necessary changes
• QL is not about „basic skills‟ but rather, like reading and
writing, is a demanding college-level learning
expectation that cuts across the entire undergraduate
curriculum
• The current calculus-driven high school curriculum is
unlikely to produce a quantitatively literate student
population” (MAA 2004:xii)
10. QL Outside of Math/Statistics
• Other disciplines provide context for
numbers, giving them meaning
• More repetition of skills, better learning
• Inclusion in multiple settings reduces
student anxiety – helps fight culture of
“quantitative dumbing down”
• Teacher anxiety can be reduced with
tools (pre-made
exercises, interpretations given)
11. YOU don’t need to be a statistics
guru to use data in class
• Start class with a data-based news article
• Have students interpret charts/graphs from
popular media and critique news articles
• Require empirical evidence to support claims in
essays
• Question banks and exercises allow students to
work with surveys and the resulting data
• Have students collect data – even in-class polls!
• Engage students by having them find
maps, graphs, or other data that provide examples
of course content
12. Tools for Faculty
• Data archives
– Public opinion
– Topic-specific
archives
• Quantitative news blogs
• Pre-made
exercises, pedagogical
examples
• Collections of resources
13. Public Opinion Data
• Roper Center for Public Opinion
Research
http://www.ropercenter.uconn.edu
• Gallup: http://www.gallup.com
• NORC reports & data:
www.norc.org/Research/DataFindings
• Pew Social & Demographic Trends:
http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/
15. News Blogs & Quick Facts
• TeachingWithData.org – Data in the
News
• U.S. Census Newsroom
• Other government sources;
organizations – beware of credibility
• Data360
• Press releases from
own university
Use of terms “Soda,” “Pop,” and “Coke”
from The Invisible Borders that Define
American Culture, Data360
16. Collections of Resources
• Science Education Resource Center
(Carleton College – pedagogical
materials)
• TeachingWithData.org
• ICPSR
– Online Learning Center
– Modules
– Tools (SSVD, Bibliography, SDA)
17. Arguments and Evidence from
Social Sciences
• Increased learning
– Makes course content relevant to students
– Emphasizes substantive points
– Higher student engagement
• Better sense of field
– Less disconnect between substantive and
technical courses
– Learn how social scientists actually work
18. More Arguments/Evidence
• Provides students with marketable
skills
– ASA survey – statistical knowledge
most widely represented on resumes
– Enhances writing and critical thinking