Week 33 – Introduction to Charts and Data Visualization
CLASS OBJECTIVE
Understand how charts help represent information visually and learn how to create simple bar charts, column charts, and pie charts using spreadsheet data.
Charts help users identify patterns, compare information, and communicate data more clearly.
CLASS AGENDA
Introduction
Understanding how charts transform numbers into visual information.
Short Review
Remembering datasets, labels, and categories.
Explanation
Learning the purpose of bar, column, and pie charts.
Demonstration
Creating charts in Google Sheets.
Practice Activity
Students create and interpret charts.
Homework
Create a chart using personal or school-related data.
1. Introduction
Imagine trying to explain your favorite music genres using only numbers.
Example:
Genre | Votes |
|---|---|
Pop | 12 |
Rock | 8 |
Reggaeton | 15 |
This information works… but it is not very visual.
Now imagine the same information represented as a chart.
A chart allows people to:
- Understand information faster
- Compare values more easily
- Identify patterns instantly
Charts transform data into visual communication.
2. Short Review
Before creating charts, remember these concepts.
Dataset
A dataset is a group of organized information.
Example:
Category | Votes |
|---|---|
Soccer | 10 |
Basketball | 5 |
Volleyball | 8 |
Label
A label identifies the information shown in a chart.
Examples:
- Soccer
- Basketball
- Volleyball
Data Visualization
Data visualization means representing information visually to make it easier to understand.
Charts are one of the most common forms of data visualization.
3. What is a Chart?
A chart is a visual representation of information.
Charts help us:
- Compare categories
- Identify trends
- Understand percentages
- Analyze information quickly
Different chart types are useful for different situations.
4. Bar Chart
A bar chart uses horizontal bars to compare categories.
Common Uses
- Favorite sports
- Video game popularity
- Grades by subject
The longest bar represents the highest value.
5. Column Chart
A column chart is similar to a bar chart, but it uses vertical columns.
Common Uses
- Monthly expenses
- Attendance
- Scores and grades
Column charts make it easy to compare values visually.
6. Pie Chart
A pie chart represents parts of a whole using percentages.
Each section of the circle represents a category.
Common Uses
- Favorite food percentages
- Social media usage
- Time spent on activities
Pie charts are useful when showing how information is divided.
7. Demonstration (Google Sheets)
Students observe the teacher creating charts step by step.
Steps
- Select the data
- Click:
- Insert → Chart
- Choose a chart type
- Edit:
- Title
- Labels
- Analyze the visual result
Example Dataset
Category | Votes |
|---|---|
Soccer | 10 |
Basketball | 5 |
Volleyball | 8 |
Students observe how:
- The same data can create different chart types
- Each chart communicates information differently
8. Interpretation Practice
Students analyze charts and answer questions such as:
- Which category has the highest value?
- Which category has the lowest value?
- Which chart is easier to understand?
- When would you use a pie chart instead of a bar chart?
This helps students develop data interpretation skills.
9. Notes in Your Notebook
Answer the following questions:
- What is a chart?
- Why are charts useful?
- What is the difference between a bar chart and a pie chart?
- When would you use a column chart?
- Which chart type do you think is easiest to understand? Why?
KEYWORDS
Chart
A visual representation of information.
Bar Chart
A chart that uses horizontal bars to compare categories.
Column Chart
A chart that uses vertical columns to compare values.
Pie Chart
A chart that represents percentages or parts of a whole.
Data Visualization
The visual representation of information.
Label
Text that identifies categories in a chart.
Percentage
A part of a whole represented out of 100.
Dataset
An organized collection of information.








