Workshop on Undergraduate Data Science Pedagogy, UC Berkeley, 2019
Published Jun 24 2019 04:35 PM 2,164 Views
Microsoft

Time: June 24-27, 2019

Location:  Chou Hall, UC Berkeley

UC Berkeley has pioneered an innovative undergraduate “Foundations of Data Science” curriculum that takes an integrated approach to introductory computer science and statistics, allowing students to use data-driven methods to think critically about the world, draw conclusions from data, and effectively communicate results.

 

Curriculum innovation accompanying the course is further developed in domain area “connector” courses that complement Data 8 concepts, “modules” that introduce data science into existing courses across campus, and complementary courses on ethics and human contexts taught by humanities and social science faculty. Several universities have incorporated aspects of this novel curriculum into their data science programs, including Cornell, Yale, and the University of Washington, among others.

 

Led by Professor Ani Adhikari and David Wagner, both recipients of the Berkeley Distinguished Teaching Award and Data 8 co-instructors, this workshop is intended for faculty who are actively engaged in developing and offering a data science curriculum.

The workshop is made possible by support from the Microsoft Corporation, the West Big Data Innovation Hub, and UC Berkeley's Division of Data Sciences.

 

Participants will come away with an in-depth understanding of these education approaches and ways to translate them to your institution.:

 

Foundations of Data Science

Designing a curriculum built on computational thinking with Python, inferential thinking by resampling, prediction, and machine learning.

 

Data Science Modules

How to infuse data sciences lectures, labs, assignments, and student projects into any domain area. 

 

Human Contexts and Ethics 

Exploring how human, social, and institutional structures and practices shape technical work around computing and data, as well as how data and computing permeate and shape our lives.

 

Technology Infrastructure

The technology underlying the pedagogy platform (JupyterHub, Kubernetes) and how to replicate it.

 

Schedule

 

Monday, June 24

12:00 PM

Welcome Lunch - Registration and Informal Gathering 

1:15 PM

Welcome - Data Science Campus Engagement (Cathryn Carson)

1:30 PM

Welcome - Workshop Vision & Overview (Eric Van Dusen)      

1:45 PM

Data 8 Overview (Ani Adhikari)

2:30 PM

Coffee Break

2:45 PM

Pedagogy of Data 8 (Ani Adhikari)

4:00 PM

National Landscape Talk and Group Discussion (David Culler) 

5:00 PM 

Reception @ Hearst Mining Building 

 

Tuesday, June 25

9:00 AM 

Inference and Estimation (Will Fithian)

10:30 AM 

Coffee Break

 

10:45 AM

Data 8 Lab

12:00 PM

Lunch

1:00 PM

Lightning Talks Session 1 

2:00 PM

Overview of Modules, Connectors, Data-Enabled Classes (Eric Van Dusen)

2:30 PM 

Coffee Break

2:45 PM

Module Demos

4:00 PM

Infrastructure Session 1

 

Wednesday, June 26

9:00 AM

Prediction and Machine Learning (David Wagner)                         

10:30 AM

Coffee Break

10:45 AM

Data 100 (Deb Nolan)                                          

11:30 AM

Human Contexts and Ethics (Ari Edmundson)                                                  

12:00 PM 

Lunch

1:00 PM

Lightning Talks Session 2

2:00 PM 

Designing of Major and Minor - Institutional (Cathryn Carson)

2:30 PM

Coffee Break

2:45 PM

Infrastructure Session 2

4:00 PM

Student Teams Presentations and Student Panel (Anthony Suen) 

 

Thursday, June 27

9:00 AM 

Lightning Talks Session 3       

10:00 AM

Unconference Session 1                             

10:30 AM

Coffee Break

10:45 AM

Unconference Session 2

11:15 AM

Community of Practices Next Steps (Cathryn Carson)                                  

Questions

For questions about the event please email: ds-help@berkeley.edu

Resources

Content and resources for the event are available at https://data.berkeley.edu/education/pedagogy-workshop-series/2019-national-workshop-data-science-edu...

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