5 CONCLUSION: THE FUTURE
OF DYNAMIC
COLLABORATIVE
VISUALIZATION
This project aims to achieve two objectives. First, it
proposes a framework for this dynamic dashboard
visualization. Much of the theory, models, and
application of dashboard visualizations in the
literature are limited in their power to communicate
with a variety of stakeholders and persuade people to
take action using the data (basic goals of data
visualization). The sustainable issues faced globally
as reflected in the sustainable development goals are
being addressed by ever-changing and integrated
techniques that require nimble data collection and
reporting. Collaboration from diverse sources over
time is a critical factor in successfully providing
current, shareable, and actionable data to advance the
fulfillment of sustainability. Dynamic Collaborative
Visualization addresses these limitations by offering
access to multiple scale data generated by the actual
users who share their data and are partners in the
changes made to both the data collection and final
visualization. The second objective is the application
of this dashboard in one particular domain, a case
study, of the United Nations 17 Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs) in higher education
institutions. The SDGs outline an inspiring,
implementable, and measurable plan for humanity to
manifest a more prosperous, equitable, and
sustainable future. This SDG Dashboard provides
opportunities for growth and expansion of current
SDG practices within business schools and
universities across the globe. This visualization
technique provides a solution to a particular problem,
that of usefully communicating large amounts of data
about social and environmental transformation
promoted by the United Nations.
By revealing useful information, assessing areas
of high impact, as well as areas where there are
opportunities for growth, the Dashboard features
reveal patterns of global impact (breadth) and activity
title and description (depth) while also providing
direct links to the overall activity where viable. The
application in the form of the SDG Dashboard,
advances data-driven best practices while enhancing
global business schools’ performance on the SDGs
and techniques to continue visualization
collaboration. Goals moving forward include the
ability to provide analytical insights as far as growth
for individual schools and address areas where more
needs to be done (example Life Below Water, SDG
14, has very little activity).
Future work will require further theoretical
development and differentiation from the existing
literature. This project provides a platform to
showcase the dashboards communicative power in a
novel context, reinforcing its value as a powerful tool
for data visualization, analysis, and application.
Overall, the dashboard provides quick access and
opportunities for organizations and institutions
working together to solve complex problems and
address challenges. At the center of the shared data
is easy access, which in this case is done through
visualization.
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