Slate.com recently published a map of the most-spoken languages in the U.S. after English and Spanis
Slate.com recently published a map of the most-spoken languages in the U.S. after English and Spanish, and political science professor Karthick Ramakrishnan generated his own at AAPIvoices.com, including maps showing the most-commonly-spoken languages of U.S. residents who don’t speak English fluently. Readers wanted to know more about the datasets, and the uses, of maps like these. Join 18MillionRising and AAPIVoices for a discussion about Census data, data journalism, and how policy and public opinion is formed by by the maps we share.Tune in at http://bit.ly/aapimaps, and share your questions and feedback on Twitter with #AAPIvoices!Panelists:Ben Blatt, Staff Writer, Slate.com (@benblatt)Terry Ao Minnis, Director of Census & Voting Programs, Asian Americans Advancing Justice-AAJC (@AAAJ_AAJC)Karthick Ramakrishnan, Professor of Political Science, UC Riverside (@karthickr)Moderated by Cayden Mak (@cayden) -- source link
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