‘Making sense of coronavirus data with your learners’ took place on 9th December 2020.
Making data meaningful in the context of coronavirus
Dr Glenna Nightingale from the University of Edinburgh and Dr Darren Macey from Cambridge Mathematics will present recent work they have been doing on analysing and interpreting Coronavirus Data with a particular focus on how this might be meaningful to teaching practitioners.
Dr Andrew Manches from the University of Edinburgh will then showcase a set of cards designed to help children discuss, learn, and share experiences of the coronavirus pandemic in a safe, fun and educational way. Your school may have already received a complimentary set of these cards for you to use.
Our speakers
Dr Glenna Nightingale is based in the Scottish Collaboration for Public Health Research and Policy at the University of Edinburgh and works in the area of developing quantitative methods for evaluating complex public health interventions.
Darren Macey works with Cambridge Mathematics and is currently studying for a Master’s degree at the Faculty of Education at Cambridge University. Darren is an ambassador for the Royal Statistical Society and a member of their ‘Teaching Statistics’ special interest group committee. His research interests include mental models of statistical concepts and developing statistical reasoning.
Dr Andrew Manches is a Senior Lecturer in Learning Sciences and Director of the Children and Technology group in the Centre for Research in Digital Education (University of Edinburgh). He leads/has led various funded projects centred around the role of interaction in how we think and learn, and the implications for early learning technologies.
Kate Farrell is Director of Curriculum Development and Professional Learning with the Data Education in Schools team.