Planting the Seeds for Data Literacy: Lessons Learned from a Student-Centered Education Program

<p>There is an increasing need for graduate students to acquire competencies in managing and curating their data sets as a part of their education. Librarians and other information professionals are beginning to respond to this need by developing programming, but as of yet there are few models...

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Main Authors: Jake Carlson, Marianne Stowell Bracke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2015-02-01
Series:International Journal of Digital Curation
Online Access:http://www.ijdc.net/index.php/ijdc/article/view/348
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spelling doaj-9c5fa36d009e4d11ac1850e62f92e8fd2020-11-24T23:24:07ZengUniversity of EdinburghInternational Journal of Digital Curation1746-82562015-02-011019511010.2218/ijdc.v10i1.348307Planting the Seeds for Data Literacy: Lessons Learned from a Student-Centered Education ProgramJake CarlsonMarianne Stowell Bracke<p>There is an increasing need for graduate students to acquire competencies in managing and curating their data sets as a part of their education. Librarians and other information professionals are beginning to respond to this need by developing programming, but as of yet there are few models to follow and the impact on the practices of students is under-explored. This case study presents a student-centered pilot program on data literacy offered at Purdue University. The program was offered through the College of Agriculture and was structured to be flexible enough to incorporate each student’s particular field of study. Exercises and assignments were designed to incorporate the student’s own research data to create meaningful, authentic learning experiences. Formative and summative assessment was a critical component of the program, which included interviews with students six months after completion of the program to determine the extent to which the data competencies covered had taken root in students’ research practices. The structure of the pilot program, its strengths and weakness, its impact on students, and lessons learned by the instructors are discussed.</p>http://www.ijdc.net/index.php/ijdc/article/view/348
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jake Carlson
Marianne Stowell Bracke
spellingShingle Jake Carlson
Marianne Stowell Bracke
Planting the Seeds for Data Literacy: Lessons Learned from a Student-Centered Education Program
International Journal of Digital Curation
author_facet Jake Carlson
Marianne Stowell Bracke
author_sort Jake Carlson
title Planting the Seeds for Data Literacy: Lessons Learned from a Student-Centered Education Program
title_short Planting the Seeds for Data Literacy: Lessons Learned from a Student-Centered Education Program
title_full Planting the Seeds for Data Literacy: Lessons Learned from a Student-Centered Education Program
title_fullStr Planting the Seeds for Data Literacy: Lessons Learned from a Student-Centered Education Program
title_full_unstemmed Planting the Seeds for Data Literacy: Lessons Learned from a Student-Centered Education Program
title_sort planting the seeds for data literacy: lessons learned from a student-centered education program
publisher University of Edinburgh
series International Journal of Digital Curation
issn 1746-8256
publishDate 2015-02-01
description <p>There is an increasing need for graduate students to acquire competencies in managing and curating their data sets as a part of their education. Librarians and other information professionals are beginning to respond to this need by developing programming, but as of yet there are few models to follow and the impact on the practices of students is under-explored. This case study presents a student-centered pilot program on data literacy offered at Purdue University. The program was offered through the College of Agriculture and was structured to be flexible enough to incorporate each student’s particular field of study. Exercises and assignments were designed to incorporate the student’s own research data to create meaningful, authentic learning experiences. Formative and summative assessment was a critical component of the program, which included interviews with students six months after completion of the program to determine the extent to which the data competencies covered had taken root in students’ research practices. The structure of the pilot program, its strengths and weakness, its impact on students, and lessons learned by the instructors are discussed.</p>
url http://www.ijdc.net/index.php/ijdc/article/view/348
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