March 4th, 2022 | RESEARCH
Presents research investigating youth data literacy at the public library. The Data Literacy with, for, and by Youth project is framed by principles of participatory design, and asks, how might an informal STEM learning environment such as the public library, support the development of the skills, knowledge, and dispositions that young people need for them to take charge of their data lives, from data creation to data use – to be, in short, data literate. The problem of how to approach something as complex as data literacy in the voluntary drop-in setting of informal, after-school sites of learning - the public library being one such place - guides this study. The aim of the project is to design, build, test, and evolve theory and practice around informal data literacy education alongside youth, with the goal of building a holistic, humanistic, and youth-oriented model of data literacy which incorporates social-awareness, critical approaches, and “goodness of fit” into STEM learning about data.
Document
https://par.nsf.gov/servlets/purl/10395279
Team Members
Leanne Bowler, Principal Investigator, Pratt InstituteMark Rosin, Co-Principal Investigator
Irene Lopatovska, Co-Principal Investigator
Laura Vroom, Contributor
Funders
Funding Source: NSF
Funding Program: AISL
Award Number: 2005608
Related URLs
Tags
Audience: Museum | ISE Professionals | Youth | Teen (up to 17)
Resource Type: Research
Environment Type: Afterschool Programs | Library Programs | Public Programs