Title: Visualization Tools for the Classroom
1Visualization Tools for the Classroom
- Karin Kirk, Cathy Manduca, Carol Ormand
- Science Education Resource CenterCarleton
College
the Science Education Resource Center at
Carleton College
SERC
2Overall outline
- Intro and think-pair-share
- The Take Home Message
- What makes a good visualization?
- How visualizations are used
- What faculty are looking for
- Barriers to use
- Affective impacts of visualizations
- SERC websites visualizations and tools for
educators
3Introduction
- Geoscience is a highly visual field, and
effective use of visual tools can enhance student
learning, appeal to students emotions and help
them acquire skills for interpreting visual
information. - This requires
- The appropriate visual tool
- Applying it effectively in the classroom
4- Pedagogic reasons to use visualizations
- Permits observation of the unobservable
- Renderings showing 3 dimensions or changes over
time make complex processes much easier to
understand (reduces cognitive load) - Visualizations allow students to construct their
own mental images that stick with them - Theyre cool!
5Think-Pair-Share
- If you are a developer of visualization tools
- Imagine your visualization tool being used in the
classroom. How is it being used?
If you are a teacher using visualization
tools How do you want to use visualizations in
the classroom? What type of visualization tools
do you need?
- Identify
- common similarities
- gaps between developers and educators
6Big take home message students dont see what
you see
- Geoscientists (you) have sophisticated spatial
reasoning skills - Mental models of processes
- Familiarity with reading maps, contours, scales
- Geography knowledge
- Looking and seeing are learned skills.
- The knowledge you bring to the image affects your
experience with it. - All of this improves with guided practice.
Frequency distribution of particles in the
atmosphere by size as developed by Whitby (1978).
Classroom scenario described by Perry Samson,
Univ. Michigan.
7- What do you see illustrated in this diagram?
- How much of what you see is a function of
geoscience that you have learned?
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9An example of using visual data in the classroom
10Another example
11So, what makes an effective visualization for
teaching?
http//serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/visualizati
on
121. The same things that work well in designing
any educational activity work well in designing
or selecting a visualization.
- Start with the intended outcome and goals.
- What you are trying to accomplish with the
visualization? - What are you trying to teach? What do you want
the students to learn?
13- 2. Students don't always see what faculty are
seeing when viewing a visualization.Just as in
other aspects of learning, what students see
and learn is built on what they already know. - Understanding what students know and see can be
addressed on four levels - Cognitive what do students focus on in a
visualization? - Educational how does the visualization build on
what they already know? - Geoscience how do students understand and
interpret the processes that are represented? - Affective how does the visualization make
students feel?
142. (continued) How can we better align what we
want students to see with what they are actually
seeing?
- Map the structure and content of the information
to be conveyed on the structure and content of
the diagram. - Use extra-pictorial devices like arrows and
guidelines unambiguously. - Craft diagram to explain, not just show.
- Check to see if students learn what is intended
- (Tversky, On the Cutting Edge workshop)
15- 3. Simple is usually better.The power of
visualizations comes from their ability to
clarify relationships rather than from
reproducing exactly the natural world. Thus, a
design which emphasizes the desired relationships
or information is likely to be more successful
than one that makes every effort to be realistic.
Students can become confused when elements of a
diagram closely resemble the actual entity they
represent in the real world - (Uttal et al., 2006).
Over-simplification can create
misconceptions Realism is helpful is some cases
16Mazur, in progress mazur-www.harvard.edu Mayer,
2001 Multimedia Learning
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23- 4. Context is important and is easily
lost.Effective visualizations maintain the
contextual relationships between the different
parts of the visualization and between the
visualization and whatever it represents. - For example, when a series of diagrams are used
to explain a process, it is important to keep the
student aware of how each step in the progression
relates to the overall process.
24- 5. Visualizations are most effective if their
organization reflects the mental organization
that the student is creating. - For example, if students create a series of still
images in their mind to represent a geologic
process, a series of still images will be most
effective in conveying information. Similarly, if
students create a mental movie, an animation may
be more effective. (Tversky et al., 2002 )
25- 6. Guidance helps.Visualizations present a large
number of relationships at a single time. Visual
or textual clues can focus attention on
meaningful items or guide the learner through the
visualization in a particular order.
26What are different ways faculty use
visualizations in the classroom?
- Show and tell in lecture, illustrated example
- Interactive lecture a visualization is paired
with a think-pair-share, minute paper, concept
test, or clicker question. - Lab activity students are guided through an
activity where they interact with a visualization
tool to look at data sets and explore spatial or
temporal relationships - Independent exploration students follow
instructions on their own, often guided by
questions provided by the instructor - Reflection/synthesis students create a drawing
or concept sketch - Assessment visualization is part of a problem
set or exam, especially after they have already
seen something similar in class or lab.
27What are faculty looking for when selecting a
visualization tool?
- Fits the learning goals of their course
- Is consistent with the level of expertise of the
students - Communicates an important point
- Helps students overcome common areas of
difficulty - Allows students to work with data and manipulate
the imagery to create a deeper understanding - Educational value of visualization is greater
than the trouble to set it up and run it
28Factors Affecting Use
- Faculty like...
- Browser-friendly
- Familiar file formats
- Ability to preview before committing to download,
or better yet, run right from the web. - Having control over scale, variables, parameters
- Intuitive the students will likely be able to
jump right in - Data and imagery that are available for re-use
- Free
- Faculty tend to avoid...
- Tools that require a special platform
- Alphabet soup of file formats
- Big commitment of downloading, installing, and
fiddling, prior to assessing if this is the right
tool for the job. - Inflexible
- Requires intervention from instructor (i.e.
ignore that part, dont forget that the colors
are backwards...) - Requires proprietary data
- Expensive
29Affective impacts of using visualizations
- Illustrations elicit emotional response (i.e. Al
Gores CO2 graph) - Using visual tools provides a welcome break from
traditional lecture - Interactive nature lets students be in control
(Reeve and Jang, 2006) - Allows students to explore, hypothesize, play
- Students can see their effect on a larger picture
(i.e. their own data set as part of larger data
series) - Todays students are comfortable with technical
media many will appreciate activities that take
advantage of technology. - However, dont spoil the fun with overly complex,
intimidating, buggy, or counterintuitive
interfaces.
30SERC has tools to help you
- Collections of visualizations for teaching
- Collections of activities using visualizations
- Recommended readings and an annotated
bibliography - Workshop program
- Links to related sites across the SERC websites
(Google Earth, Teaching with Visualizations) - Visualization collections embedded into many
geoscience topics - Share your favorite visualization or activity
http//serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/visualizati
on