Big Data: Information in the Digital World with Science Activities for Kids (Build It Yourself)

Big Data: Information in the Digital World with Science Activities for Kids (Build It Yourself)

by Carla Mooney (Author)

Synopsis

What is big data and what does it have to do with you?

Have you watched videos online today? Did you post photographs on social media? Did you upload your English essay to Google docs?

All of these questions are questions about data. Data is information. It can be stored in books, magazines, on graph paper, in computers, and with many other methods. Most of the data that exists today is stored in computers, and the amount of data humans produce is doubling every year and half. That's why it's called big data!

In Big Data: Information in the Digital World with Science Activities for Kids, kids ages 9 to 12 explore the definition of data and learn about the relationship between data, computers, and people. They learn about the history of data, the transition from paper to computers, and the role that search engines such as Google play in handling data. Data management, data analytics, and the history of computers are all topics covered in this book on big numbers for kids.

Data is something computer scientists think about a lot. A computer's capacity to function and perform is directly related to how much data it can store. A computer that can't store much data won't be very popular. As more and more of our daily lives become connected to computers--schoolwork, watching movies on a laptop, paying for snacks with a debit card--computers are required to handle more and more data. New improvements in data storage mean that there are fewer limits on the amount of data businesses can store, but what does that mean for users? How does data management make our lives easier? Do we need all of this information or are we storing data we'll never use again simply because we can?

Throughout Big Data, STEAM investigations and experiments provide hands-on, problem-solving opportunities for students that incorporate various challenges and tools. Using readily available household items and recycled materials, each activity will take the reader through an inquiry-based, open-ended investigation that leaves plenty of room to explore individual creativity. With essential questions, fun facts, and links to online primary sources and videos, kids will mine the topic of big data and become better, more informed digital citizens of the world!

$26.85

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 128
Publisher: Nomad Press
Published: 23 Aug 2018

ISBN 10: 1619306794
ISBN 13: 9781619306790
Book Overview:

  • $40,000 marketing and publicity budget (for series)
  • Exhibiting at national and regional conferences including:
    American Library Association (ALA: 60,000 members)
    National Science Teacher Association/STEM (NSTA: 60,000 members)
    American Association of School Librarians (AASL: 10,000 members)
    Public Library Association (PLA: 11,000 members)
    Texas Library Association (TLA: 7,000 members)
    National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS: 25,000 members)
    International Literacy Association (ILA: 60,000 members)
    Association for Middle Level Education (AMLE: 40,000 members)
  • Advertising in the following publications:
    SLJ display ads (3-4 times for series)
    Booklist/Booklinks display ads (3-4 times)
    Booklist/Booklinks online ads
    Follett Library
    Ingram (Children's Advance 2 times)
    Baker & Taylor (Growing Minds)
  • Publicity and promotion in conjunction with the author's speaking engagements at bookstores, libraries, schools, museums, events, and conferences
  • Extensive social media outreach via Facebook (www.facebook.com/carla.mooney), Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram, Goodreads, LinkedIn, YouTube, and the author's blog (www.carlamooney.com)

Media Reviews

Praise for other books in the series

Innovators

National Science Teachers Association Recommends
Innovators is a magnificent compilation of vignettes about creative and critical thinkers who have contributed to solving problems and improving existing products or processes. . . Innovators is a wonderful book. It is engaging, readable, and full of relevant information about important inventions and innovations and the context behind them. Readers will appreciate focus on equity of gender and race among the innovators throughout the book. This book does not contain glossy color photographs, but has cartoon style illustrations throughout. Innovators would be useful for teaching science or STEM classes, for background reading in classes, or can be read and used at home just because it is such an engaging book. As a fifth grade science teacher, I highly recommend getting a copy for any third to sixth grade classroom. Read the complete review online.

Learning Magazine
What do Google and chocolate chip cookies have in common? Both were created by innovators! Learn about the people and products that have changed the world; then get your students innovating with 25 STEAM projects.

3-D Engineering

Science Books and Films
++: Highly Recommended
. . . This book is a wonderful resource for teachers and parents to use in the classroom and at home. It gets back to the basics with exciting activities that are hands-on that support the STEM program. When kids use their hands and work together to create a prototype, the outcomes are much higher when they are actively engaged in this type of learning. It gives students confidence in math while building problem-solving and critical-thinking skills. This is a book that teachers, parents, boys, and girls will enjoy as they learn about the many facets of the engineering world.

School Library Connection, April 2016
Author Vicky V. May has produced a procedural book for the 21st century. Information covers electricity, chemistry, earth science, physics, and energy. . . The text, with fast facts, sidebars, and text boxes, is kid-friendly and the topics fit the science curriculum. Its guided inquiry approach makes this a useful tool for students seeking science fair ideas, teachers selecting creative outcomes to lessons, and learners who thrive on hands-on projects. Cartoon-like illustrations supplement the how-to aspect of the book nicely. Glossary. Index. Recommended

Author Bio

Carla Mooney has written more than 70 books for children and young adults. She is the author of several books for Nomad Press, including Terrorism: Violence, Intimidation, and Solutions for Peace, Evolution: How Life Adapts to a Changing Environment, The Holocaust: Racism and Genocide in World War II, and Comparative Religion: Investigate the World through Religious Tradition. She lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.