In a recent post, Alan Levine discussed the use of a web tool called Your Flowing Data. Your Flowing Data(YFD), is a Twitter application that lets you collect data about yourself. It allows you to use direct messages from your Twitter account to track different types of data. Basically, once you have set up your account, you just send a direct message to YFD to note and track just about anything. In Alan’s post he noted some of his uses including keeping track of his blood sugar readings, his bike trips and his running mileage. Basically anything you want to track you can do so.
Alan’s post got me thinking of how I might use this tool. As a principal I make many visits to classrooms each day. Using the method that Alan discussed I am thinking I can use this to keep track of classroom visits throughout the school day. On my iPhone I use the Twitter application Tweetie to follow and post to Twitter. I anticipate using Tweetie to post direct messages to Your Flowing Data as I visit classrooms. I believe I will find this a pretty quick method to note and track which classrooms I have visited and help me to recognize patterns and make sure I am visiting all classrooms equally.
This morning I was testing this and posted some sample data. Once you have some data, you can use the tools on Your Flowing Data to look at that information in a calendar view, a cloud view, a timeline view and a treemap view. The screenshot below shows the treemap view for the sample data i submitted. I’m looking forward to following Alan’s examples and utilize this tool to keep track of other things including the types of tasks I find myself doing during the school day.

Using some sample data, the Treemap above shows graphically the number of times a classroom was visited.
Cross posted at TechLearning.com


























@ Tim
Interesting tool. I’m going to check it out. This potential application sounds very intriguing.
Another fun tool is google has now added the “tasks” to the calendar feature. I’ve been using it this summer and it leaves me a nifty little record of what I did each day.
As a principal I want to experiment tracking all the unplanned for conversations I have each day that suck time away from other tasks. Granted for the sake of unity and humanity a number of these while distracting are enjoyable. I wonder if i track them with time and content if I could find if the items I perhaps fail to communicate well are causing all these conversations.
Of course if I really wanted them to end I could just be an ass.
Posted on July 31, 2009 at 8:47 pm.
Test comment
Posted on August 2, 2009 at 12:00 pm.