The Promise and Practice of Teaching Data Literacy in Social Studies: A Companion SiteMain MenuA Taxonomy of Data VisualizationsInformation can be visualized in multiple ways, from bar graphs to scatterplots, choropleth maps to distribution maps, timelines to time series. Designers can choose from an array of graphical elements such as points, lines, or icons used to represent data, and multiple aesthetic attributes such as color, shape, and size. Furthermore, designers can apply multiple combinations of titles, legends, and explanatory text to provide context for a data visualization. Given the almost dizzying array of data visualizations students may encounter in social studies, it is helpful to place them in categories related to the types of questions they will help us answer.Data Visualizations as Primary SourcesHumans have been creating different types of data visualizations for centuries. Explore this collection of timelines, maps, graphs and charts to see what they reveal about the historical time and place in which they were produced.How do students learn with data visualizations?Reading data visualizations in print and online social studies texts can improve students' overall comprehension and quality of reasoning. And there is evidence to suggest that reading data visualizations helps students better understand historical and geographic context, multiple causation, and change over time — all important concepts for students to grasp in social studies subject areas. However, students may face significant challenges in trying to make sense of different kinds of data visualizations. This section provides insight into both benefits and challenges of reading timelines, maps, and graphs and charts.How should students analyze data visualizations in social studies?The challenges that data visualizations present, coupled with their prevalence in social studies texts, standardized assessments, in online social studies resources, and as sources of information in society, suggest that teaching with and about data visualizations in social studies is essential. This module provides guidance for how teachers can support students' data literacy for social studies.How do I help students create and integrate data visualizations for social studies?This page highlights several tools that are useful for data-based projects in social studies. And accompanying each tool is a "minimal manual" that provides guidance for using the tool in social studies inquiry- and project-based learning.Project-Based Learning Activities for Data Literacy in Social StudiesLorem ipsum dolor sit amet, nec constituto comprehensam te. Sea no affert nemore comprehensam, eum te purto soleat accusata. Ea est magna malis. No atqui iudico est. In vel propriae suavitate. Est homero timeam cu, novum persecuti mea an.Index of Lesson PlansThis page contains a list of the minimal manuals and lessons found on this website. Minimal manuals are designed to be adapted to different grade levels and do not have a grade designation associated with them. Lesson plans are organized according to the school level for which they are designed. However, many of these lessons can be adapted for different grade levels.Tamara Shreiner72eaa2d1ba1352b75b8a8da73e879a4ceb510ae0
Map of the United States, showing by colors the area of freedom and slavery, and the territories whose destiny is yet to be decided : exhibiting also the Missouri compromise line, and the routes of Colonel Fremont in his famous explorations : with importa
1media/map of US showing free and slave states 1856_thumb.jpg2021-04-01T15:39:46-07:00Mark Guzdial12293646cf3f9238a8ffe62e740f7f92aafe60a3351332Published as a campaign poster supporting the Republican Party's first presidential bid in 1856, this broadside provides a commentary on the geographical sectionalism that was polarizing the nation. Using 1850 census data, it tabulated the demographic and economic differences between free and slave states, highlighting political concerns that the balance of Congressional power would shift as newly acquired western territories were admitted as states into the Union. The map clearly marked the 1820 Missouri Compromise line, which had defined the boundary between free and slave states. However, the passage of the 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act nullified this long-standing compromise line, and potentially opened the entire western territory to slavery because it sanctioned “popular sovereignty“ whereby citizens of each territory could vote on the slavery issue.plain2021-04-01T15:40:15-07:0040.7103433689794, -74.005358813673961856Mark Guzdial12293646cf3f9238a8ffe62e740f7f92aafe60a3
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1media/Screenshot 2020-07-14 16.14.21.pngmedia/7823054.jpg2020-05-18T06:57:48-07:00Tamara Shreiner72eaa2d1ba1352b75b8a8da73e879a4ceb510ae0Primary Source Data Visualizations for U.S. History & Geography125This page provides a list of primary source data visualizations to support inquiry in U.S. history and geography. They are organized according to the periodization scheme in Michigan's social studies standards for U.S. history.plain2021-08-16T09:59:36-07:00Kristen Taurence096bf11ea9ce4df55aba17c3029242306dd910c3