Youth Critical Data Practices in the COVID-19 Multipandemic

Author:

Calabrese Barton Angela1ORCID,Greenberg Day1ORCID,Turner Chandler1,Riter Devon1ORCID,Perez Melissa1,Tasker Tammy1,Jones Denise1,Herrenkohl Leslie Rupert1,Davis Elizabeth A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Michigan

Abstract

This study investigates how youth from two cities in the United States engage in critical data practices as they learn about and take action in their lives and communities in relation to COVID-19 and its intersections with justice-related concerns. Guided by theories of critical data literacies and data justice, a historicized and future-oriented participatory methodological approach is used to center the lived lives and communities of participants through dialogic interviews and experience sampling method. Data were co-analyzed with participants using critical grounded theory. Findings illustrate how youth not only aimed to reveal the dynamic and human aspects of and relationships with data as they engage with/in the world as people who matter but also offered alternative infrastructures for counter data production and aggregation toward justice in the here and now and desired possible futures. Implications for studies of learning with/through data practices in everyday life in relation to issues of justice are discussed.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education

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