Instructor Notes
Instructor notes
Lesson purpose
The purpose of this lesson is not to teach how to do data analysis in spreadsheets, but to teach good data organization and how to do some data cleaning and quality control in a spreadsheet program.
Narrative
Concluding points
- Now your data is organized so that a computer can read and understand it. This let’s you use the full power of the computer for your analyses as we’ll see in the rest of the workshop.
- While your data is now neatly organized, it still might have errors or missing data or other problems. It’s like you put all your data in the right drawers, but the drawers might still be messy. The next lesson is going to teach you OpenRefine which is great for data cleaning and for some of the quality control that we touched on in this lesson. It also has the advantage that it automatically keeps track of the steps you take.
Technical tips and tricks
Provide information on setting up your environment for learners to view your live coding (increasing text size, changing text color, etc), as well as general recommendations for working with coding tools to best suit the learning environment.
Potential issues
Excel looks and acts different on different operating systems
The main challenge with this lesson is that Excel looks very different and how you do things is even different between Mac and PC, and between different versions of Excel. So, the presenter’s environment will only be the same as some of the learners.
We need better notes and screenshots of how things work on both Mac and PC. But we likely won’t be able to cover all the different versions of Excel.
If you have a helper who has experience with the other OS than you, it would be good to prep them to help with this lesson and tell how people to do things in the other OS.
People are not interactive or responsive on the Exercise
This lesson depends on people working on the exercise and responding with things that are fixed. If your audience is reluctant to participate, start out with some things on your own, or ask a helper for their answers. This generally gets even a reluctant audience started.
Using spreadsheet programs for data organization
Narrative Guidance
- Introduce that we’re teaching data organization, and that we’re using spreadsheets, because most people do data entry in spreadsheets or have data in spreadsheets.
- Emphasize that we are teaching good practice in data organization and that this is the foundation of their research practice. Without organized and clean data, it will be difficult for them to apply the things we’re teaching in the rest of the workshop to their data.
- Much of their lives as a researcher will be spent on this ‘data wrangling’ stage, but some of it can be prevented with good strategies for data collection up front.
- Tell that we’re not teaching data analysis or plotting in spreadsheets, because it’s very manual and also not reproducible. That’s why we’re teaching SQL, R, Python!
- Now let’s talk about spreadsheets, and when we say spreadsheets, we mean any program that does spreadsheets like Excel, LibreOffice, OpenOffice. Most learners are probably using Excel.
- Ask the audience any things they’ve accidentally done in spreadsheets. Talk about an example of your own, like that you accidentally sorted only a single column and not the rest of the data in the spreadsheet. What are the pain points!?
- As people answer highlight some of these issues with spreadsheets
Instructor Note
This exercise can be useful when you teach Tidy Data as the introduction to a full LC workshop, especially if you want learners to have an opportunity to meet each other and interact. It can take anywhere from 10 to 45 minutes, depending on your approach.
Formatting data tables in Spreadsheets
Narrative Guidance
- Go through the point about keeping track of your steps and keeping raw data raw
- Go through the cardinal rule of spreadsheets about columns, rows and cells
- Hand them a messy data file and have them pair up and work together to clean up the data. Give them 15 minutes to do this.
- Ask for what people did to clean the data. As they bring up different points you can refer to them in the 02-common-mistakes.md file, or expand a bit on the point they brought up. If you are just teaching the lesson, it would be good to familiarize yourself with the set of mistakes in 02-common-mistakes. All these mistakes are present in the messy dataset.
- If you get a response where they’ve fixed the date, you can pause and go to the 03-dates-as-data.md lesson. Or you can say you’ll come back to dates at the end. There’s an exercise in that file about how to change the date into three columns using Excel’s built in MONTH, DAY, YEAR functions. Have them run through that exercise.
Formatting problems
This lesson is for reference
- Don’t go through this chapter except to refer to as responses to the exercise in the previous chapter.
Dates as data
Narrative Guidance
- Do the exercise and make the point about dates either in response to a learner bringing up date as an issue during the responses, or at the end of the response time.
Basic quality assurance and control
Narrative Guidance
This lesson is optional
The challenge with this lesson is that the instructor’s version of the spreadsheet software is going to look different than about half the room’s. It makes it challenging to show where you can find menu options and navigate through.
Instead discuss the concepts of quality control, and how things like sorting can help you find outliers in your data.
Exporting data from spreadsheets
Narrative Guidance
- Have the students export their cleaned data as
.csv
. Reiterate again the need for data in this format for the other tools we’ll be using.
Caveats of popular data and file formats
This lesson is for reference
- This is mainly here as a reference if people have questions about different file formats. You don’t need to go through this.