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Authoring Data Stories in a Media Makerspace: Adolescents Developing Critical Data Literacies

Authoring Data Stories in a Media Makerspace: Adolescents Developing Critical Data Literacies This article centers sociocultural and sociopolitical considerations of how young people understand, represent, and use data by presenting findings from a social design research study about how students in a public urban high school authored “data stories” using personal data they curated, collected, and visualized. The study contributes to theoretical understandings of critical data literacies by considering the experiences and practices of adolescents enrolled in a required media arts class as they produced data visualizations drawn from their everyday lives. Findings center on two aspects of critical data literacies youth developed—understanding themselves as people capable of using data for multiple purposes and understanding data as socially situated resources for meaning-making. This study foregrounds the importance of positioning youth as authors and architects of data, making central youth perspectives in understanding the role of data in young people’s digitally connected lives and highlighting the importance of expanding what “counts” as data. It also suggests the importance of creating infrastructure to support the development of culturally relevant data practices that highlight the social, cultural, and political uses of data and its racialized dimensions. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of the Learning Sciences Taylor & Francis

Authoring Data Stories in a Media Makerspace: Adolescents Developing Critical Data Literacies

Journal of the Learning Sciences , Volume 29 (1): 23 – Jan 1, 2020

Authoring Data Stories in a Media Makerspace: Adolescents Developing Critical Data Literacies

Journal of the Learning Sciences , Volume 29 (1): 23 – Jan 1, 2020

Abstract

This article centers sociocultural and sociopolitical considerations of how young people understand, represent, and use data by presenting findings from a social design research study about how students in a public urban high school authored “data stories” using personal data they curated, collected, and visualized. The study contributes to theoretical understandings of critical data literacies by considering the experiences and practices of adolescents enrolled in a required media arts class as they produced data visualizations drawn from their everyday lives. Findings center on two aspects of critical data literacies youth developed—understanding themselves as people capable of using data for multiple purposes and understanding data as socially situated resources for meaning-making. This study foregrounds the importance of positioning youth as authors and architects of data, making central youth perspectives in understanding the role of data in young people’s digitally connected lives and highlighting the importance of expanding what “counts” as data. It also suggests the importance of creating infrastructure to support the development of culturally relevant data practices that highlight the social, cultural, and political uses of data and its racialized dimensions.

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References (49)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
Copyright © 2019 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
ISSN
1532-7809
eISSN
1050-8406
DOI
10.1080/10508406.2019.1689365
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

This article centers sociocultural and sociopolitical considerations of how young people understand, represent, and use data by presenting findings from a social design research study about how students in a public urban high school authored “data stories” using personal data they curated, collected, and visualized. The study contributes to theoretical understandings of critical data literacies by considering the experiences and practices of adolescents enrolled in a required media arts class as they produced data visualizations drawn from their everyday lives. Findings center on two aspects of critical data literacies youth developed—understanding themselves as people capable of using data for multiple purposes and understanding data as socially situated resources for meaning-making. This study foregrounds the importance of positioning youth as authors and architects of data, making central youth perspectives in understanding the role of data in young people’s digitally connected lives and highlighting the importance of expanding what “counts” as data. It also suggests the importance of creating infrastructure to support the development of culturally relevant data practices that highlight the social, cultural, and political uses of data and its racialized dimensions.

Journal

Journal of the Learning SciencesTaylor & Francis

Published: Jan 1, 2020

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