41
Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom Sharon Stoerger PELC11 April 7, 2011 [email protected]

Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Presentation for PELC11

Citation preview

Page 1: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Sharon StoergerPELC11April 7, [email protected]

Page 2: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Agenda• Social media

– What is it & why is it valuable?– Why Twitter?

• Information visualisation– What is it?– Why should I visualise?– What are educational uses of information

visualisation?

• Visualising Twitter data• The future

Page 3: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

What is social media?

Page 4: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

One Definition (boyd & Ellison, 2007)

• Web-based services that allow individuals to:– construct a public or semi-public

profile within a bounded system;

– articulate a list of other users with whom they share a connection; and

– view and traverse their list of connections and those made by others within the system. 

http://jcmc.indiana.edu/vol13/issue1/boyd.ellison.html

Page 5: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Why is social media valuable?

• Increase communication• Increase feelings of

connectivity• Increase online learning

community• Increase learning

Page 6: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

http://twitter.com

Page 7: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom
Page 8: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Why Twitter?• Microblogging (140 characters)• Easy-to-use• Push down communication• Not email

– Zero clutter– Students social media > email (Roblyer et al.,

2010)

• Personal Learning Network (PLN)– Learning through connections– Connectivism (Siemens, 2004)

Page 9: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Definitions (Card et al., 1999, p. 7)

• Visualisation: The use of computer-based, interactive visual representations of data to amplify

cognition.

• Information visualisation: The use of interactive visual representations of abstract,

nonphysically based data to amplify cognition.

Page 10: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

What is information visualisation?

• Robertson, Card, & Mackinlay (1989)– First use of the term “information visualisation”

– Cognitive amplification, interactivity, animation

• Represent data – visual form• External cognition aids

– Maps, charts, graphs, diagrams

– Text clouds, animations– Social media relationships (e.g., Hansen, 2011)

– Mashups (e.g., Google Maps/Google Earth)

Page 11: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

“Evolution” of Information Visualisation

Page 12: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Information Visualisation = Mainstream

• Today’s tools – Free, interactive– Bring data to non-

experts

• Journalists – NY Times– http://tinyurl.com/45md7ur

• Artists– Brooke Singer– Databody – http://www.bsing.net/databody.

pdf

Page 13: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Q: WHY SHOULD I VISUALISE?

Page 14: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

A Picture is Worth 1,000 Words

Pictures can attract

attention faster than

other media (Barnard,

1927)

Page 15: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom
Page 16: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Reference Model for Visualisation (Card et al., 1999, p. 17)

Page 17: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

The Language of the Eye• The User Illusion

(1999)

• Sight faster– Bandwidth– Computer network

• Better understanding– Eye – Mind

Page 18: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

http://www.octium.eu/en/index.php/information-systems

Page 19: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

TMI: Too Much Information• Twitter users (e.g., Rao, 2011)

– 572,000 accounts created on March 12, 2011

– 460,000 (ave.) new accounts/day

– Mobile users are up 182% from 2010

• Tweets – the numbers– 140 million Tweets (ave.)/day

– 50 million Tweets sent per day, a year ago 

– Record tweets = 177 million March 11, 2011

Page 20: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Visualising Twitter Traffichttp://vimeo.com/11302556

Page 21: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Visualisation = Data Compression

• David McCandless, 2010• Data is the new oil• Or is data the new soil?

– Fertile – Well-tilled medium– Visualisations = data flowers

Page 22: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Education-related Reasons to Visualise• Insight (not pictures)

• New way to see & experience information

• Hidden patterns, connections = revealed

• Narrative = clarified

• Amplify cognition - sense making (Card et al., 1999; Larkin & Simon, 1987)

• Self-organising maps = brain organisation

• Integrate offline-online experiences

• Digital & critical competencies

Image: http://www.brainandlearning.

eu/

Page 23: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Information Visualisation Example

• Ward Shelley’s “History of Science Fiction”• Rhetorical drawings• http://scimaps.org/submissions/7-digital_libraries/maps/thumbs/024_LG.jpg

Page 24: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Visualisation Activities• Reimagine existing assignments• “Software Studies” (Manovich, 2008)

– Use & evaluate software– Limitations & biases– Influence

• Analyse and produce visualisations– Visual literacy– Functional literacy (Selber, 2004)

Page 25: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

What Twitter information can I visualise?

Twitter• Tweets (e.g., @csoleil)• Hashtags (e.g.,

#socmedia)/backchannel communication

• Retweets• Replies• Links

Projects• Text• Personal data• Social data

• Create = digital artifacts

Page 26: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

HOW DO I VISUALIZE TWITTER DATA?

Page 27: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Text clouds: Wordle http://www.wordle.net/

• Common text visualiser• “A toy for generating word clouds”

Page 28: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Text Cloud: Tagxedohttp://www.tagxedo.com/

Page 29: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Text & Hashtag Clouds: TweetStatshttp://tweetstats.com/

Page 30: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Wordle Plus: Many Eyeshttp://www-958.ibm.com/software/data/cognos/manyeyes/

• “…like Facebook for infovis nerds” (Sorapure, 2009, p. 63)

• IBM researchers (Fernanda Viegas, Martin Wattenberget, etc.)

Page 31: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Text Analysis Portal for Research (TAPoR)http://portal.tapor.ca/portal/portal

• Tools analysis and retrieval• Representative texts experimentation

Page 32: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Conversations: Twitterfall http://twitterfall.com/

• Real time tweet searching• New tweets fall on the page

Pause

tweets

Page 33: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Statistics: TweetStathttp://tweetstats.com/

Page 34: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Networks: Mentionmaphttp://apps.asterisq.com/mentionmap/#

Page 35: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Twitter Friends Network Browserhttp://www.neuroproductions.be/twitter_friends_network_browser/

Page 36: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Visualisation Concerns• “Eye candy”

– “Chart junk” graphics (Card et al., 1999)

– Graphical distortion - highlights anomalies (Tufte, 1983)

• Ease-of-use – Less familiar with data sets

– Not fully understand data– Mislead/confuse consumers

• Evaluation of effectiveness– Criteria, measurements, methods???– Experience subjectivity

Page 37: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Rashômon (4 versions of the truth)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xCZ9TguVOIA

Page 38: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

What’s Next?• Programs

– National Visual Analytics Centers (NVACs) - 2005– Analyse agency information needs

• Disciplines– Technology, art, science (van Wijik, 2005)

– Humanities– Education

• Tools– Dashboards, visual analytics, simple graphs– Interactive visualisations – Mobile applications Public participation

Page 39: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

The Future? http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/minority_report/trailers/11129681

Page 40: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Thank You!!!

Questions? Sharon Stoerger

Email: [email protected]: sharon.stoergerTwitter: csoleilSecond Life: Cerulean Soleil

Page 41: Social Media and Student Learning: Using Analytics to Visualise Twitter Communication in the Classroom

Read More About It• Card, S. K., Mackinlay, J. D., Shneiderman, B. (1999). Readings in

information visualization. San Francisco, CA: Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Inc.

• Few, S. (2010). Information visualization, design and the arts: Collision or collaboration? Visual Business Intelligence Newsletter.

• Johnson, L., Levine, A., Smith, R., Stone, S. (2010). The 2010 horizon report. Austin, TX: The New Media Consortium.

• Larkin, J., & Simon, H. A. (1987). Why a diagram is (sometimes) worth ten thousand words. Cognitive Science, 11(1), 65-99.

• Manovich, L. (2010). What is visualization. http://manovich.net/2010/10/25/new-article-what-is-visualization/

• Moretti, F. (2005). Graphs, maps, trees: Abstract models for a literary history. London: Verso

• Sorapure, M. (2009). Information visualization, Web 2.0, and the teaching of writing. Computers and Composition, 27, 59-70.

• Tufte, E. R. (1983). The visual display of quantitative information. Cheshire, CT: Graphic Press.

• van Wijk, J. J. (2005). The value of visualization. In C. Silva, E. Groeller, H. Rushmeier (eds.), Proceedings of IEEE Visualization 2005, 79-86. 

• Ware, C. (2004). Information visualization: Perception for design, 2nd ed. San Francisco: Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Inc.