How you collected Data • Talk about the project. • Describe the method for collecting data. • What was it like collecting the data?
Who you collected Data on • Introduce the participants (the who) of your data collection. • Include relevant information (Title, job, age, category, etc. )
Explanation of Data on you • State THREE claims about YOUR media usage that can be supported with evidence from your data.
Data on YOU • Create a visual display of your data. • Choose a format that best represents the data that will support your claims. (Graphs, tables, etc. ) • Consider: Total usage, average usage per day, average use in a each category: You decide!
Explanation of Data on “Other” • State THREE claims about the “Other” person that can be supported with evidence from the data you collected on them.
Data on “OTHER” • Create a visual display of the data you collected on the other person. • Choose the format that best represents the data that will support your claims. (graphs, tables, etc. ) • Consider: Total usage, average daily use, average use in each category: You decide!
Comparison of Data • State three claims that show the similarities in the data. • How are you and your other person alike in your media usage?
Contrast the Data • State three claims that show the differences that you noticed from the data. • How are you and your other person different in your media usage?
Conclusion/Reflection • Paragraph written reflection on your findings. – What was difficult about this project? – What was easy about this project? – Did you have any epiphanies? – How would you change this project to make it better?