Youth Data Visualization Practices: Rhetoric, Art, and Design

June 17th, 2025 | RESEARCH

In the recent K-12 educational literature, arts-based data visualization has been positioned as a compelling means of rendering data science and statistical learning accessible, motivating, and empowering for youth, as data users and producers. However, the only research to attend carefully to youth’s data-based, artistic storytelling practices has been limited in scope to specific storytelling mechanisms, like youth’s metaphor usage. Engaging in design-based research, we sought to understand the art and design decisions that youth make and the data-based arguments and stories that youth tell through their arts-based data visualizations. We drew upon embodied theory to acknowledge the holistic, synergistic, and situated nature of student learning and making. Corresponding with emerging accounts of youth arts-based data visualization practices, we saw regular evidence of art, storytelling, and personal subjectivities intertwining. Contributing to this literature, we found that these intersections surfaced in a number of domains, including youth’s pictorial symbolism, visual encoding strategies, and data decisions like manifold pictorial symbols arranged to support complex, multilayered, ambiguous narratives; qualitative data melding community and personal lived experience; and singular statements making persuasive appeals. This integration of art, story, agency, and embodiment often manifested in ways that seemed to jostle against traditional notions of and norms surrounding data science.

Document

https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/15/6/781

Team Members

Joy Bertling, Co-Principal Investigator, University of Tennessee
Lynn Hodge, Principal Investigator, University of Tennessee Knoxville

Funders

Funding Source: NSF
Funding Program: AISL
Award Number: 2215004

Related URLs

Mathematizing, Visualizing, and Power (MVP): Appalachian Youth Becoming Data Artists for Community Learning

Tags

Audience: General Public | Learning Researchers | Museum | ISE Professionals | Youth | Teen (up to 17)
Discipline: Art | music | theater | Computing and information science | Mathematics
Resource Type: Research
Environment Type: Citizen Science Programs | Community Outreach Programs | Public Programs