Teaching Data Fluencies

An example of Notation 1

A technological case study of the Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking

This section was designed as an example of how the notation assignment can be composed using a lowtech, narrative approach.

Research Problem:

I’m currently working on a project with Dr. Nicole Stewart at Texas State University that involves a media archaeology of research data for Generative Artificial Intelligence (Gen AI). My own disciplinary background is in media sociology and cultural studies with a focus on the intersection of cultural production and digital technologies. In this project, we’re interested in analysing how psychometric tests conducted in late-19th to mid-20th century might provide useful insights into how people currently design and use Gen AI tools.
I have two goals for making the following set of notations/annotations. The first goal is obviously pedagogical – the point is to create a demonstration of the process of notating/annotating data for you by doing one myself based on my own work. The second goal relates to the research itself – exploring how we might use visual materials as data for this research project.
Because of these two goals, we will use a case study method to compose my notations/annotations. This is appropriate because we’ve used a conceptual framework taken from Science and Technology Studies (STS) for the research and this framework aligns well with the biographical case study of technology (Lesage & Natale 2019). Since the problem I’m exploring is a question of if/how to share this visual material as data in future publications, it seems like the right method to use. Of course, if your own research situation and goals are different, you will want to consider some of the other notation/annotation methods to decide what better suits what you want to achieve.

Notation tools:

The goal of this example is to show how "low-tech" these notations can be. The only tools we've used to create this case study to date are books and other archival material, the referencing platform Zotero, and the screenshot feature from my laptop.

Data Situation:

This specific case study is part of a larger research project. It will focus on the psychometric tests designed by E. Paul Torrance and his team called the Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking (TTCT for short - also sometimes referred to as the Minnesota Tests of Creative Thinking or MTCT). Without going into the details, I first encountered this test in recent literature on psychometric creativity tests like Reckwitz’s (2017) book “The Invention of Creativity” Sawyer & Henriksen’s (2023) chapter: “Defining Creativity Through Assessment”. In this literature, the tests are mostly discussed in a historical and/or methodological context but don’t show how the tests are implemented; the process for making images as part of the tests. It is this process —the techniques, technologies, and concepts involved — that we’re specifically interested in. For that reason, I went out searching for some more information about the TTCT.

The case study

To start the research, we needed to find would more bibliographic data to understand the TTCT – ie. references about the TTCT.

1. Initial bibliographic research:

TTCT_Figure_1

 

TTCT_Figure_5

TTCT_Figure_6


TTCT_Figure_9

2. Success (almost):

Torrance’s book provides useful information about the test and some discussion of process, but no actual materials about the tests.

TTCT_Figure_2TTCT_Figure_3

TTCT_Figure_4

3. A happy accident and more success:

TTCT_Figure_10L
TTCT_Figure_11L

TTCT_Figure_12L
 

References

Bates, J., Lin, Y.-W., & Goodale, P. (2016). Data journeys: Capturing the socio-material constitution of data objects and flows. Big Data & Society, 3(2), 2053951716654502. https://doi.org/10.1177/2053951716654502
Leonelli S. (2016), Data-Centric Biology: A Philosophical Study. University of Chicago Press.
Lesage, F., & Natale, S. (2019). Rethinking the distinctions between old and new media: Introduction. Convergence, 25(4), 575–589. https://doi.org/10.1177/1354856519863364
Reckwitz, A. (with Steven Black (Translator)). (2017). The invention of creativity: Modern society and the culture of the new (English edition.). Polity Press.
Sawyer, R. K., & Henriksen, D. (2023). Defining Creativity Through Assessment. In R. K. Sawyer & D. Henriksen (Eds.), Explaining Creativity: The Science of Human Innovation (p. 0). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197747537.003.0003

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