cwilliams11
portal for educators, librarians, & media specialistsArchive for data visualization
Goodies
Could someone pay for me to survive without working so that I can play with goodies discovered online? Granted, none of the following may be earthshaking. They probably won’t save any lives. It is the joy of creativity that seems so compelling.
“Peopleshare their videos on YouTube and their photos at Flickr. Now they can share more technical types of displays: graphs, charts and other visuals they create to help them analyze data buried in spreadsheets, tables or text. At an experimental Web site, Many Eyes, (www.many-eyes.com), users can upload the data they want to visualize, then try sophisticated tools to generate interactive displays.”

- Image by Spotrick via Flickr
Wordle
“Wordle is a toy for generating “word clouds” from text that you provide.” http://wordle.net
Actually, since it is a fairly new tool people are still experimenting with Wordle and creating useful applications!
Join the Google Group for Wordle Users to learn more.
Moodstream
“a visual “brainstorming tool” specifically designed to take people in inspiring, unexpected directions.”
http://moodstream.gettyimages.com/
Flowgram
“a way to share Web pages, photos, and videos in a browser-based player that acts like an interactive screencast.”
http://www.flowgram.com
Less Read, More to Understand
Even librarians are admitting that their reading habits are changing; that the number of long novels read decreases each year. Students often want a book that’s less than 200 pages: to the rescue (collective loud sigh) comes a niche product: lazy library.
YouTube – Royksopp – Remind Me is not a new clip, but this day I’m thinking of the power of text, image and motion in short, brief bursts. While traveling to a workplace to be online is almost dated, the video still gets across the fact that we are constantly surrounded by data, with the need to read and make sense of many different visualizations.
At the end there’s a shot of beer stats, otherwise the clip would be great for use with students.
Do students know what’s currently posted on class bulletin boards or school hallway signs?
Could they create a slice-of-life photo stream of the data in their daily lives, or gather examples of data used in different careers?
Might they compare the reading levels of web pages, or chart their own reading preferences?
There’s plenty of online tools for presenting photos and data in jazzy ways. Student responses would make a nice collaborative exhibit to post on a class wiki; while building their knowledge of media and visual literacy.
“For 500 years, we’ve taught our children to read words. The time has come to teach them also to read the powerful images and sounds of their multi-media world.” __Center for Media Literacy
UPDATE: In this morning’s SnagIt newsletter, “excellent blog post by Kathy Sierra.”
“A quick excerpt for the truly time-challenged:
A pile of evidence supports that people learn more deeply from words with pictures than from words alone (Mayer, 1989b, Mayer and Gallini, 1990; Mayer, Bove, and others, 1996.), and overall, several studies combined have shown a median percentage gain of 89% effectiveness.
Sierra also makes a case for putting text captions on pictures instead of under them—an intriguing concept.”
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