Click here to access the Online Curriculum Introduction to Reporting You’ve entered your data. Now you need to create reports for analysis. 19. Pivot Tables and Data Visualizer 20. Event Visualizer and Event Reports 21. Standard Reports 22. Data Set Reports 23. GIS 24. Dashboards 25. Create a Legend Set Contact: info@logicaloutcomes.net Presenters: Nicholas Santillo & Chantria Tram
Pivot Table Here is a simple pivot table (and it can be customized in lots of ways). This is a problem area Here it’s displayed as a heat map (or scorecard). It’s easy to get overwhelmed with data and reports. Most people have limited tolerance for complexity – even if they are familiar with data analysis they may be too busy to focus in on the most important elements.
Graphs Visualizations can show program activities at a glance, or raise questions about data quality. Here you can see that the program is closed during the summer. No problem, but we may be too slow ramping up in September. Are the students not showing up? It’s possible that attendance data isn’t being recorded. Check it. It’s easy to get overwhelmed with data and reports. Most people have limited tolerance for complexity – even if they are familiar with data analysis they may be too busy to focus in on the most important elements.
Disease surveillance (Ebola 2015) From http://apps.who.int/ebola/current-situation/ebola-situation-report-8-april-2015
Dashboard
Thank you for watching Click here to access the Online Curriculum Developed by LogicalOutcomes For more information contact: info@logicaloutcomes.net Toronto +1 (647) 478-5634 Washington +1 (202) 779-9634 www.logicaloutcomes.net