How to Gain Knowledge When Data Are Shared? Open Government Data from a Media Pedagogical Perspective

Numerical data are becoming one of the dominant codes for describing society. Public services are sharing Open Government Data (OGD) as public goods. Academic interest so far has focused on political, technical and organizational implications. Educational research has been widely neglecting OGD. I a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Valentin Dander
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lillehammer University College 2014-11-01
Series:Seminar.net
Subjects:
OGD
Online Access:https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/seminar/article/view/2377
id doaj-f0fce9de3a1d4c588ae4d3529afc2761
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f0fce9de3a1d4c588ae4d3529afc27612020-11-24T23:25:32ZengLillehammer University CollegeSeminar.net1504-48312014-11-011012377How to Gain Knowledge When Data Are Shared? Open Government Data from a Media Pedagogical PerspectiveValentin Dander0University of Cologne, GermanyNumerical data are becoming one of the dominant codes for describing society. Public services are sharing Open Government Data (OGD) as public goods. Academic interest so far has focused on political, technical and organizational implications. Educational research has been widely neglecting OGD. I argue that contemporary media pedagogy needs to productively and critically consider this development in research and practice, engaging with the question of how these data can be turned into knowledge. What objections to OGD as a political project have emerged, and what skills are required by data users? Apart from giving examples of how data use can be learned and supported, this paper illustrates and discusses potentials and risks for OGD use in terms of learning and subject transformation. Various objectives for media pedagogy – such as media, digital and data literacy, numeracy and picturacy – will be discussed in order to draw conclusions on a conceptual level. This paper aims at a differentiated approach to OGD and data education, taking into account their growing importance as well as emerging paradox constellations.https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/seminar/article/view/2377open government dataOGDopen datamedia pedagogyeducationdigital and media literacydata literacy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Valentin Dander
spellingShingle Valentin Dander
How to Gain Knowledge When Data Are Shared? Open Government Data from a Media Pedagogical Perspective
Seminar.net
open government data
OGD
open data
media pedagogy
education
digital and media literacy
data literacy
author_facet Valentin Dander
author_sort Valentin Dander
title How to Gain Knowledge When Data Are Shared? Open Government Data from a Media Pedagogical Perspective
title_short How to Gain Knowledge When Data Are Shared? Open Government Data from a Media Pedagogical Perspective
title_full How to Gain Knowledge When Data Are Shared? Open Government Data from a Media Pedagogical Perspective
title_fullStr How to Gain Knowledge When Data Are Shared? Open Government Data from a Media Pedagogical Perspective
title_full_unstemmed How to Gain Knowledge When Data Are Shared? Open Government Data from a Media Pedagogical Perspective
title_sort how to gain knowledge when data are shared? open government data from a media pedagogical perspective
publisher Lillehammer University College
series Seminar.net
issn 1504-4831
publishDate 2014-11-01
description Numerical data are becoming one of the dominant codes for describing society. Public services are sharing Open Government Data (OGD) as public goods. Academic interest so far has focused on political, technical and organizational implications. Educational research has been widely neglecting OGD. I argue that contemporary media pedagogy needs to productively and critically consider this development in research and practice, engaging with the question of how these data can be turned into knowledge. What objections to OGD as a political project have emerged, and what skills are required by data users? Apart from giving examples of how data use can be learned and supported, this paper illustrates and discusses potentials and risks for OGD use in terms of learning and subject transformation. Various objectives for media pedagogy – such as media, digital and data literacy, numeracy and picturacy – will be discussed in order to draw conclusions on a conceptual level. This paper aims at a differentiated approach to OGD and data education, taking into account their growing importance as well as emerging paradox constellations.
topic open government data
OGD
open data
media pedagogy
education
digital and media literacy
data literacy
url https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/seminar/article/view/2377
work_keys_str_mv AT valentindander howtogainknowledgewhendataaresharedopengovernmentdatafromamediapedagogicalperspective
_version_ 1725557082547027968