Responsible Data
I think data is important. I even recently presented about "Data Driven Coaching" at ISTE! I've been thinking a lot about how we use data to tell a story and the implications it has for teachers and our students.
One thing that really gets me upset is when I see data being reported (usually visually) in misleading ways. Sometimes I think people just don't realize that they are creating something misleading, while other times things are done to intentionally exaggerate what is actually going on. This TED-Ed video explains this really well:
So when I came across this tweet, I immediately looked at the y-axis. I noticed that the % was "zoomed in" making it look like engagement in high school was practically 0%, even though it was 44%. Now, 44% isn't great. And the overall trend of declining engagement is worrisome. But, the math teacher in me was just a little annoyed at the misleading graph.
One thing that really gets me upset is when I see data being reported (usually visually) in misleading ways. Sometimes I think people just don't realize that they are creating something misleading, while other times things are done to intentionally exaggerate what is actually going on. This TED-Ed video explains this really well:
So when I came across this tweet, I immediately looked at the y-axis. I noticed that the % was "zoomed in" making it look like engagement in high school was practically 0%, even though it was 44%. Now, 44% isn't great. And the overall trend of declining engagement is worrisome. But, the math teacher in me was just a little annoyed at the misleading graph.
This is OUR problem. We must do something to combat it. Remember, our system is perfectly designed to get the results it produces #edchat pic.twitter.com/YV2if3Mxa6— MEM Thebook (@MeaningfulEval) July 7, 2017
To illustrate my point, I decided to quickly make a little chart on a spreadsheet. Using Numbers on my MacBook, I entered the three data points and then was able to manipulate the max and min of the y-axis. Notice the first graph goes from 0%-100% while the second replicates the original (misleading) graph of about 40%-80%. See the different in apparent steepness of decline?
Check out these graphs- same data, different scale of y-axis. Downward trend is important to address, but need to represent responsibly. :) pic.twitter.com/sA7c9XUbwj— Annie Forest (@mrsforest) July 8, 2017
Again, I agree with the original tweet that we need to address this decline in engagement. However, we are living in a data saturated culture in education and we all to be critical consumers when it comes to the story people tell using data.
I love when you push our thinking. Did they ever respond?
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