Eventmath/Lesson plans/Illustrating "a tale of two Americas" in work from home trends
< Eventmath | Lesson plans
Please help develop this lesson plan!
|
Please help develop this lesson plan!
|
Lesson plan overview | |
---|---|
Title | Illustrating "a tale of two Americas" in work from home trends |
Assumed knowledge | Familiarity with basic pivot tables in Excel, chart and/or mapping programs to create data visualizations. |
Activities | Students will use the Census date to illustrate these "two Americas" across a range of demographic, economic, and employment categories. |
Class time | 60-90 minutes |
Source | |
"Last week, Census released 2021 data giving us our first look at the spatial distribution of the transition to working from home. A tale of two Americas emerges. Those who could adjust to work from home, and those who could not". Twitter. 2020-9-19. {{cite web}} : Check date values in: |date= (help) | |
Want more lesson plans? Browse | |
This is the main content of the lesson plan. Write as much or as little as needed to convey the main objective, the activities and tasks, and any other essential information. You may organize this content however you'd like.
You can use LaTeX to render mathematical symbols, such as . See the Help:Formula page for more details.
You may also wish to include helpful materials for an instructor:
You're welcome to suggest exercises, activities, assignments, or projects based on the material of this lesson.
(Include these sections at your discretion, keeping in mind that you and others can always edit and add more to these sections later.)
You're welcome to share links to openly-accessible content (e.g. from Khan Academy, YouTube, Wikiversity, etc.) about domain knowledge or math skills students should have. Likewise, you may wish to include contextual information for the instructor.
You're welcome to share references for additional learning and exploration, such as links to other articles, videos, spreadsheets, or computer code. When an open-access substitute is unavailable, links to paywalled sites are acceptable in this section.
Have you found this lesson plan helpful? Tell us about it!
Just click Endorse below to open up an editor and type your comments. When you're ready, they'll appear at the bottom of this section to help other educators looking for good lesson plans.
(Alternatively, if you see a way to improve this lesson plan, be bold and make an edit! You're also welcome to discuss the lesson plan or provide constructive feedback on its Discussion page.)