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16. Teaching Data Through Stories

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Manage episode 317305269 series 2942152
Content provided by Karthik Shashidhar. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Karthik Shashidhar or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The phrase “using data to tell stories” is so commonly used nowadays that it runs the risk of becoming a cliche, if it hasn’t become one already. This episode’s guest flips this logic around - instead of using data to tell stories, he uses stories to teach data science!

Arvind Venkatadri is a faculty member at Srishti Manipal School of Art, Design and Technology. His research/teaching interests include TRIZ, Computation in R, Design using Open Source Electronics Hardware, and Complexity Science. He is part of the School of Foundation Studies at SMI.

This is a very wide ranging conversation. We talk about, among other things, The Three Musketeers, Lawrence of Arabia and Legally Blonde. We talk about how Arvind leverages all of these to teach his students data science and logic and game theory.

At a time when the field of data science is rife with “pile stirring”, where a large section of practitioners treat it as an extension of software engineering, Arvind’s approach, centred on stories and the human experience, is really refreshing. His approach also gives a pointer on how to widen the base in terms of attracting people into data science.

I must apologise for one thing - this conversation was recorded during Deepavali in November 2021, so you can occasionally hear the sound of firecrackers in the background. I really hope you can get past that and listen to Arvind’s stories.

Show Notes

00:03:00: Arvind’s journey into teaching Data Science in an art school

00:05:45: Teaching data science to art students

00:15:45: Teaching statistics through art and stories. Wassily Kandinsky

00:23:00: Teaching coding through art

00:31:00: Shapes and colours and emotions

00:44:00: Lawrence of Arabia (can’t say more here in the description!)

00:50:00: Data science and the human experience

Links:

Arvind’s homepage

Arvind on Twitter

Arvind’s course on R for artists and designers

An intro to Wassily Kandinsky's work

Data Chatter is a podcast on all things data. It is a series of conversations with experts and industry leaders in data, and each week we aim to unpack a different compartment of the "data suitcase".

The podcast is hosted by Karthik Shashidhar. He is a blogger, newspaper columnist, book author and a former data and strategy consultant. Karthik currently heads Analytics and Business Intelligence for Delhivery, one of India’s largest logistics companies.

You can follow him on twitter at @karthiks, and read his blog at noenthuda.com

  continue reading

17 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 317305269 series 2942152
Content provided by Karthik Shashidhar. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Karthik Shashidhar or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The phrase “using data to tell stories” is so commonly used nowadays that it runs the risk of becoming a cliche, if it hasn’t become one already. This episode’s guest flips this logic around - instead of using data to tell stories, he uses stories to teach data science!

Arvind Venkatadri is a faculty member at Srishti Manipal School of Art, Design and Technology. His research/teaching interests include TRIZ, Computation in R, Design using Open Source Electronics Hardware, and Complexity Science. He is part of the School of Foundation Studies at SMI.

This is a very wide ranging conversation. We talk about, among other things, The Three Musketeers, Lawrence of Arabia and Legally Blonde. We talk about how Arvind leverages all of these to teach his students data science and logic and game theory.

At a time when the field of data science is rife with “pile stirring”, where a large section of practitioners treat it as an extension of software engineering, Arvind’s approach, centred on stories and the human experience, is really refreshing. His approach also gives a pointer on how to widen the base in terms of attracting people into data science.

I must apologise for one thing - this conversation was recorded during Deepavali in November 2021, so you can occasionally hear the sound of firecrackers in the background. I really hope you can get past that and listen to Arvind’s stories.

Show Notes

00:03:00: Arvind’s journey into teaching Data Science in an art school

00:05:45: Teaching data science to art students

00:15:45: Teaching statistics through art and stories. Wassily Kandinsky

00:23:00: Teaching coding through art

00:31:00: Shapes and colours and emotions

00:44:00: Lawrence of Arabia (can’t say more here in the description!)

00:50:00: Data science and the human experience

Links:

Arvind’s homepage

Arvind on Twitter

Arvind’s course on R for artists and designers

An intro to Wassily Kandinsky's work

Data Chatter is a podcast on all things data. It is a series of conversations with experts and industry leaders in data, and each week we aim to unpack a different compartment of the "data suitcase".

The podcast is hosted by Karthik Shashidhar. He is a blogger, newspaper columnist, book author and a former data and strategy consultant. Karthik currently heads Analytics and Business Intelligence for Delhivery, one of India’s largest logistics companies.

You can follow him on twitter at @karthiks, and read his blog at noenthuda.com

  continue reading

17 episodes

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