IEEE VIS Workshop on Visualization Education, Literacy, and Activities 2023
This workshop focuses on visualization education, literacy, and activities and will be held on 23 October 2023 at IEEE VIS in Melbourne, Australia. It intends to bring together scholars to share research and experience and discuss novel activities, teaching methods, and research challenges. The workshop aims to serve as a platform for scholars within and beyond the visualization community such as education, learning analytics, science communication, psychology, or people from adjacent fields such as data science, AI, and HCI. It will include presentations of research papers and practical sessions with hands-on activities. In addition, the workshop will allow participants to discuss challenges they face in data visualization education and outline a research agenda of visualization education, literacy, and activities.
See the full proposal here.
Proceedings
All accepted papers were publish in the Conference Proceedings at IEEE Xplore.
Program
23 October 2023 - IEEE VIS Conference (Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre, Room 104)
9.00 - 9:10 AEDT (UTC+11): Workshop Opening & Outline
9:10 - 9:40: Keynote: Data Storytelling in Learning Analytics … and its intertwined relationship with visualisation literacy (Dr. Roberto Martinez-Maldonado, Monash University)
9:40 - 10:15: Paper session
- Educational Data Comics: What can Comics do for Education in Visualization? (Magdalena Boucher,Benjamin Bach, Christina Stoiber, Zezhong Wang, Wolfgang Aigner)
- Reflections on Designing and Running Visualization Design and Programming Activities in Courses with Many Students (Søren Knudsen, Mathilde Bech Bennetsen, Terese Kimmie Høj, Camilla Jensen, Rebecca Louise Nørskov Jørgensen, Christian Søe Loft)
- Design Actions for the Design of Visualization Onboarding Methods (Christina Stoiber, Margit Pohl, Wolfgang Aigner)
- Preparing Future Data Visualization Designers for Professional Practice (Paul Parsons)
10:15 - 10:45: Coffee Break
10:45 - 11:20: Paper session
- Beyond Generating Code: Evaluating GPT on a Data Visualization Course (Chen Zhu-Tian, Chenyang Zhang, Qianwen Wang, Jakob Troidl, Simon Alexander Warchol, Johanna Beyer, Nils Gehlenborg, Hanspeter Pfister)
- Developing Technical Skillsets in Diverse Audiences (Jonathan Leidig)
- Reflections on Teaching ‘Data Exploration and Visualisation’ in Multiple Modes (Michael Niemann, Sarah Goodwin, Kim Marriott)
- dAn-oNo Learning Environment for Data Journalists Teaching Data Analytics Principles (Christina Stoiber, Štefan Emrich, Sonja Radkohl, Eva Goldgruber, Wolfgang Aigner)
- “Choose-your-own” D3 labs for learning to adapt online code (Maryam Hedayati, Matthew Kay)
11:20 - 12:00: OpenMic VisActivies, WrapUp
Keynote
Title: Data Storytelling in Learning Analytics … and its intertwined relationship with visualisation literacy
Data is omnipresent, yet that doesn’t necessarily make us more knowledgeable. The ultimate goal of data analytics is to extract key insights from data to inform decision-making. In education, this is the mission of the fast-growing field of Learning Analytics. This area employs a variety of data-centric tools, from data visualizations to intricate predictive models, to enhance teaching and learning. Yet, the primary objective is to “close the analytics loop” by delivering actionable feedback or recommendations directly to students and educators. This presents a challenge in human-data interaction. Currently, most end-user learning analytics interfaces rely on dashboards featuring various data visualizations, which are often complex and hard to interpret by students and teachers. But the question remains: Can we do better than simply showing charts to students and teachers?
In this keynote, I will discuss about our most recent work in bringing Data Storytelling to Learning Analytics in various collaborative learning settings. This is an emerging approach that shifts the focus from visualising data points to the narratives that can be derived from them. This can be accomplished in several ways, such as combining visualizations with narrative to convey insights, crafting text-based learning analytics tools, experimenting with alternative visualisation techniques like data comics, or developing analytics tools that teachers can use to guide students’ reflection. We have also explored whether data storytelling provides more support to audiences with lower visualization literacy.
BIO: Dr. Roberto Martinez-Maldonado received the Ph.D. degree in Information Technologies from the University of Sydney, in 2014. He is currently a Senior Lecturer of Learning Analytics and Human-Computer Interaction with the Faculty of Information Technology and Coordinator of the Centre for Learning Analytics with Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia. He is a co-author of numerous research papers. He is the first Mexican-Australian to win the Swiss-based Jacobs Foundation Research Fellowship (2021–23) for his pioneering research in Human-Centred AI in Education. His research focuses on advancing the understanding of socio-technical issues around the use of artificial intelligence in education, promoting the use of human-centred methodologies to create learning analytics interfaces with integrity and enhancing authentic learning spaces with multimodal data-intensive computing capabilities. He has been Program Chair of the International Conference on Learning Analytics and Knowledge and the International Conference of Artificial Intelligence in Education and he is a regular Associate Chair of the Learning and Education subcommittee of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. He is Associate Editor of the International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education.
Workshop goals and scope of topics
With this workshop, we want to achieve the following goals:
- build a forum and interdisciplinary community around teaching data visualization, open to researchers, students, and practitioners outside the traditional VIS community
- share research on visualization literacy, education and teaching, and practices
- collect, test, and systematize learning activities
- discuss best practices and challenges concerning visualization education and literacy
The workshop topics include, but are not limited to:
- Visualization literacy
- Learning goals and learning methods
- Evaluation methods and learning analytics
- Educational tools
- Visualization activities
- Pedagogy in visualization
- Teaching in different scenarios (onsite, online, hybrid)
- Reflective and research practices
- Understanding and teaching to diverse audiences (e.g., children/adult learning, data journalists/data scientists/computer scientists/designers)
- Guidelines, strategies, and guidance for education
- Debate and discussions on visualization guidelines and well-established knowledge
- Knowledge dissemination
- Challenges and personal experiences
- Informal learning
- Experiential learning (hands-on learning & physicalization)
- Visualizations for public education (e.g., health education, science communication)
- Engagement with visualizations
- Teaching approaches that encourage creativity and design critique
- Accessibility of visualization learning resources
Call for Submission
The workshop accepts two types of submissions:
- Research papers: authors are encouraged to submit a paper of length proportional to its contribution (submissions are expected to be minimum of 2 pages to a maximum of 8 pages excluding references, intended for publication through the IEEE Xplore DL).
Research papers must follow the formatting guidelines for VGTC Conference Style Template..
We will use the Precision Conference System (PCS) for the research paper submission and reviewing process. We allow both double-blind (anonymized) and single-blind (not anonymized) submissions.
- Activities: practical reports that describe how an activity is conducted and how it could be reused by others and in other contexts; these activity reports will be published on the workshop website (not for publication in IEEE Xplore DL).
Activities must follow the following template and submitted via email to ieee-eduvis@googlegroups.com.
At least one author per accepted paper must register for IEEE VIS and present the work at the workshop, which will take place on 22 or 23 October 2023 during the conference in Melbourne, Australia. There is no online or hybrid participation planned this year.
Important Dates
All deadlines are at 11:59pm (23:59) AoE Anywhere on Earth
- July 2, 2023: Abstract Submission Deadline
July 1, 2023: -> July 9, 2023: Paper Submission Deadline
July 30, 2023: -> August 4, 2023: Author Notification
- August 15, 2023: Submission Camera Ready Deadline
- September 20, 2023: Deadline for Activity Submission (no submission to the abstract deadline required)
- October 23, 2023 (9:00 AM-12:00 PM AEDT (UTC+11)): IEEE VIS in Melbourne, Australia
Program Committee
- Jan Aerts (Amador Bioscience – Hasselt, Hasselt University & KU Leuven)
- Wolfgang Aigner (University of Applied Sciences St. Pölten)
- Jillian Aurisano (University of Cincinnati)
- Rahul Bhargava (Northeastern University)
- Magdalena Boucher (University of Applied Sciences St. Pölten)
- Alexandra Diehl (Universität Zürich)
- Jason Dykes (City – University of London)
- Elif E. Firat (University of Nottingham)
- Florian Grassinger (University of Applied Sciences St. Pölten)
- Sarah Hayes (Munster Technological University - Cork, IE)
- Martin Kandlhofer (Austrian Computer Society)
- Christoph Kinkeldey (HAW - Hamburg, DE)
- Søren Knudsen (IT University of Copenhagen)
- Doris Kosminsky (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro)
- Bum Chul Kwon (IBM Research, Cambridge)
- Areti Manataki (University of St Andrews)
- Isabel Meirelles (The Ontario College of Art and Design University)
- Laura Pelchmann (Universität Köln, DE)
- Renata Georgia Raidou (TU Wien, Austria)
- Arran Ridley (University of Leeds)
- Panagiotis Ritsos (Bangor University)
- Robert S Laramee (University of Nottingham)
- Jon Schwabish (Urban Institute)
- Elena Stoll (University of Applied Sciences Dresden)
- Nicole Sultanum (ableau Research)
- Yalong Yang (Department of Computer Science at Virginia Tech)
Organizers
- Mandy Keck, University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria
- Samuel Huron, Telecom Paris, Institut Polytechnique de Paris
- Georgia Panagiotidou, UCLIC, University College London
- Christina Stoiber, St. Pölten University of Applied Sciences
- Fateme Rajabiyazdi, Carleton University
- Charles Perin, University of Victoria
- Jonathan C. Roberts, Bangor University
- Benjamin Bach, University of Edinburgh