Greetings programmers!
Just a reminder that we're on for the final day(!) of the CDSW this
TOMORROW, Saturday February 14th. We'll cover putting things together
and starting analysis and visualization. We'll be creating a space for
review for folks who want time to catch up or review.
We're planning on afternoon tracks including plotting data using
Python and spreadsheets, civic data from data.seattle.gov, independent
work on your own projects guided by mentors, and a CDSW review space!
We'll meet again in Savery 260 at 9:45 on Saturday morning. Details
on directions and logistics are all online at the normal place:
https://wiki.communitydata.science/CDSW_Winter_2020
We'll also have Community Data Science stickers, coffee, and báhn mì!
Regards,
Mako
--
Benjamin Mako Hill
http://mako.cc/academic/
Creativity can be a social contribution, but only in so far
as society is free to use the results. --GNU Manifesto
Greetings fellow data scientists!
Our third and final session is coming up! This time around we’re
planning a mix of topics focused on giving folks a chance to review
and reinforce the material we’ve covered and to build toward some new
skills focused on visualizing data to ask and answer questions.
Saturday’s morning lecture will go over how we can take data we
obtained via web APIs and visualize them. We’ll introduce a few final
new concepts but mostly the focus will be on putting things together
we covered in the previous session.
In the afternoon, you’ll have 3 options that each build toward
creating data visualizations and asking/answering questions of data:
A) visualizing Seattle city data; B) project-based mentoring on
topics/questions you suggest; and C) CDSW Review Café where you’ll get
more hands on practice with the concepts and challenges introduced
during day 0, 1, and 2 as we incorporate some examples of
visualization.
1. We’ve posted a survey on Session 2 that asks for information which
we’ll use to plan the next session. Please take the time to give us
feedback: https://forms.gle/6j45guLm9a1ANNFX9
2. If you are interested in participating in Option B on project-based
mentoring of topics of your choice, please fill out this very short
one question form to tell us what you’d like to work on by Wednesday
5PM PST: https://forms.gle/Jj2vHfz3RzEQYmjh8
3. If you are interested in participating in the CDSW Review Café,
please fill out this form to help us prepare:
https://forms.gle/J7hjzRgDHyDThRxR9
4. We’ve posted solutions to many of the challenges in the projects:
Worked solutions to the Yelp challenges from Jason, Ivan, and Mako are
available online here: https://github.com/CommunityDataScienceCollective/yelp-api-cdsw-solutions
Worked solutions from Nate to a number of the Wikipedia challenges are
here: https://github.com/CommunityDataScienceCollective/wikipedia-cdsw-answers
We’ll be following up with solutions to Twitter later in this
week. Apologies for the delay!
If you want to download these and try them on your computer (there is
a “Clone or Download” button on the side which will let you download
them all if you click on “Download ZIP”).
If you were in the group that worked through different challenges, you
might still find the experience of trying to read our Python code
helpful. Even if you worked on these problems, your solutions will
likely be different, and that’s OK! Programming is creative and
expressive and there are many valid paths and approaches!
5. We now have 2 beautiful scarves that were left behind during the
last two sessions. Please contact me if you’ve lost a scarf (or two!).
We’ll be in touch at least once more before meeting again on February
15th! We know that this has been challenging and home Saturday will be
an opportunity to have fun as you get to hone both your programming
skills and creativity!
Regards,
Mako
--
Benjamin Mako Hill
https://mako.cc/academic/
Creativity can be a social contribution, but only in so far
as society is free to use the results. --GNU Manifesto