Writing Data Stories

There is growing interest in integrating data literacy and data science throughout the K-12 curriculum. One practice that is increasingly common in the professional world, and is generating enthusiasm from educators, is data storytelling. In data storytelling, the presentation of data and statistics are coupled with other visual and narrative elements to explain what is done to data during the process of analysis, why such analysis is important, and to communicate to a broad audience the results and their implications.

The Writing Data Stories Project (NSF IIS-1900606) brings together a team of researchers from University of California Berkeley, NC State University, and the Concord Consortium to integrate computational data analysis into the middle school science curriculum in a longitudinal, interdisciplinary way – drawing from the computer and data sciences, literacy studies, statistics, and science education to saturate the classroom with relevant tools, resources, and support. Our project seeks to introduce students to data storytelling by encouraging them to articulate their personal and social connections to data as they simultaneously engage with the statistical patterns contained therein.

Goals

The project provides a research context to address the following questions:

  • How do students learn, over time, to use computational tools to structure, calculate, filter, and transform data for scientific inquiry?
  • What patterns of engagement in scientific practices are supported by the integration of computational data analysis and visualizations into the science curriculum?
  • What new literacy practices might support engaging oral and written arguments and explanations using data and visualizations as evidence?

Specifically, it brings together and seeks to extend three complementary research constructs. Data moves are the computational actions analysts take to transform and analyze datasets. Syncretic texts are specialized texts that blend academic discourse, such as the formulae and statistical language needed to explain data analysis, with the familiar modes of expression (including home languages, interviews, journalistic sources, and alternative forms of expression such as video, art, animation, etc.). Finally, data storytelling encourages students to weave their personal experiences, different modes of expression, and not only their findings but also their reflections and processes for working with data.

Classroom Ready Materials

The Writing Data Stories project team has developed three main sets of classroom-ready materials that can be used to support data explorations in middle school science (and mathematics or social studies) instruction. Visit the Resources page or click the icons below to learn more:

DataBytes

Quick activities (30 min or less) that invite students to connect data to their experiences and the world.

Include teacher prompts and data visualizations about everyday scientific issues from news sources or classroom curriculum.

Data Launchpads

Highly interactive documents designed for teachers and students to engage with large datasets.

They offer an accessible, scaffolded intro larger datasets within the CODAP data analysis platform.

Curriculum Units

Connected to specific science, statistics, and social justice standards, and are designed to build critical data literacy skills.

They are designed for deeper, 2-4 week engagements with a socio-scientific topic.

Latest News and Publications

You can see all of our papers and major presentations on the Publications page.

  • DataBytes in Bite-Sized Lesson Plan Competition

    Our DataByte What is Healthy: Making Sense of Graphs and Data Reported in Media received an Honorable Mention in the Data Science 4 Everyone’s first annual Lesson Plan Competition! The What is Healthy? unit builds on our DataBytes discussion structure, which asks students to interpret graphs and data from media sources using not only in […] Continue reading…

Icon Credits: analytics by SBTS at thenounproject.com; data visualization by Vectors Point at thenounproject; presentation by Drishya at thenounproject.com

This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. (IIS-1900606). Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.


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