val dander said:
Wow, everything but simple:
http://pad.okfn.org/p/first_take
Still a lot to learn about this, I guess..
Anyways: thanks for the challenge!
This course will become read-only in the near future. Tell us at community.p2pu.org if that is a problem.
Data isn't an end in itself. We usually want data to help us answer some question or help us do some activity. To begin with, we will give you an example below, but your task is to find your own question about your country. In the following steps you'll find data to analyze and answer it.
Wow, everything but simple:
http://pad.okfn.org/p/first_take
Still a lot to learn about this, I guess..
Anyways: thanks for the challenge!
The example helps illuminate the process of trying to identify and mine a data set.
In the example provided on Lesotho, Wikipedia is just cited in passing & useful for some background info. Seems to me, though, it is a source of richer data so why not make this more prominent?
I hope there will be some possibility to transmate this french site in english : http://www.histographe.com/ is a site that collects historical data which is amazingly interesting and great ressources for both historians and schoolchildren.
DataKind (formerly Data Without Borders) has some great examples of problems, datasets used, and results from their datadives. For example: http://datakind.org/york-city-datadive/.
These probably need to be cleaned up to be succinct but they are great resources for getting familiar with data needs, resources, and solutions.