Article

Big data and learning analytics: Singular or plural?

Details

Citation

Wilson A, Thompson TL, Watson C, Drew V & Doyle S (2017) Big data and learning analytics: Singular or plural?. First Monday, 22 (4). http://firstmonday.org/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/6872/6089#author

Abstract
Recent critiques of both the uses of and discourse surrounding big data have raised important questions as to the extent to which big data and big data techniques should be embraced. However, while the context-dependence of data has been recognized, there remains a tendency among social theorists and other commentators to treat certain aspects of the big data phenomenon, including not only the data but also the methods and tools used to move from data as database to data that can be interpreted and assigned meaning, in a homogenizing way. In this paper, we seek to challenge this tendency, and to explore the ways in which explicit consideration of the plurality of big data might inform particular instances of its exploitation. We compare one currently popular big data-inspired innovation — learning analytics — with three other big data contexts — the physical sciences, business intelligence and public health. Through these comparisons, we highlight some dangers of learning analytics implemented without substantial theoretical, ethical and design effort. In so doing, we also highlight just how plural data, analytical approaches and intentions are, and suggest that each new big data context needs to be recognized in its own singularity.

Journal
First Monday: Volume 22, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Publication date03/04/2017
Publication date online03/04/2017
Date accepted by journal20/03/2017
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/25250
PublisherUniversity of Illinois at Chicago Library
Publisher URLhttp://firstmonday.org/…6872/6089#author

People (3)

People

Dr Valerie Drew

Dr Valerie Drew

Lecturer in Education Leadership, Education

Dr Terrie-Lynn Thompson

Dr Terrie-Lynn Thompson

Senior Lecturer, Education

Professor Cate Watson

Professor Cate Watson

Emeritus Professor, Faculty of Social Sciences