Creating Dashboards and Storytelling with Tableau Week 4

Course Name: Data Visualization with Tableau

Sub-course: Creating Dashboards and Storytelling with Tableau

Course Link: Data Visualization with Tableau

Sub-course Link: Creating Dashboards and Storytelling with Tableau

These are answers of Creating Dashboards and Storytelling with Tableau Week 4 Coursera Quiz


Module 4 Quiz

Q1. Which of the following editing features can you use in Tableau’s story feature?
Adjusting the size circles in a scatterplot
Changing the layout of the story to fit properly on any screen
Creating actions
Making table calculations

Answer: Changing the layout of the story to fit properly on any screen


Q2. Among the useful roles stories have long played for humans is that
They provide a vivid and memorable way to convey information
They can let people simulate situations that they don’t have to experience directly
Both of the above
Neither of the above

Answer: Both of the above


These are answers of Creating Dashboards and Storytelling with Tableau Week 4 Coursera Quiz


Q3. What is a story as defined by Tableau?
A sheet that contains a sequence of worksheets or dashboards that work together to convey information
A group of Business Intelligence objects that are connected in a star schema
Something that must contain a plot
A report of connected events, real or imaginary, presented in a sequence of written or spoken words, and/or still or moving images.

Answer: A sheet that contains a sequence of worksheets or dashboards that work together to convey information


Q4. Some research with people who have damage to the parts of the brain involving emotion suggests
Emotions should always be avoided in decision making
Emotions have an important impact on the ability to make decisions
Emotions have a minor impact on the ability to make decisions

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Answer: Emotions have an important impact on the ability to make decisions


These are answers of Creating Dashboards and Storytelling with Tableau Week 4 Coursera Quiz


Q5. From Tableau’s point of view, a story point is
A static screen capture of a visualization
A point in a scatterplot
An individual sheet in a story
A circle in a map identifying a location

Answer: An individual sheet in a story


Q6. One technique to help people connect with a story is to
When possible, use specific, concrete examples to illustrate the larger narrative
Avoid using specific, concrete examples of the larger narrative being presented
Only use specific, concrete examples and avoid describing any larger narrative

Answer: When possible, use specific, concrete examples to illustrate the larger narrative


These are answers of Creating Dashboards and Storytelling with Tableau Week 4 Coursera Quiz


Q7. Which of the following ways should you NOT create a story?
Design everything as final and then drop them into the Tableau story. Don’t drop them in until they are absolutely final
Add them to your story iteratively
If it doesn’t follow a narrative you can’t add the visualization
Add several visualizations, one on each tab

Answer: Design everything as final and then drop them into the Tableau story. Don’t drop them in until they are absolutely final


Q8. The meaning and symbolism of specific colors
Can vary from culture to culture
Is never the same across cultures
Is always the same across cultures

Answer: Can vary from culture to culture


These are answers of Creating Dashboards and Storytelling with Tableau Week 4 Coursera Quiz

See also  Essential Design Principles for Tableau Week 3

Q9. You could think of a Tableau story as akin to this other commonly used software:
A page in Microsoft Word
Statistical output from R
A slide in a PowerPoint
A sheet in an Excel workbook

Answer: A slide in a PowerPoint


These are answers of Creating Dashboards and Storytelling with Tableau Week 4 Coursera Quiz


Q10. Generally speaking, one of the ways a visualization geared for exploratory analysis differs from an explanatory presentation/story
The former lets audiences come to their own conclusions
The latter leads audiences to a specific conclusion
Both of the above

Answer: Both of the above


These are answers of Creating Dashboards and Storytelling with Tableau Week 4 Coursera Quiz


Q11. Which of the following is not an example of a common storytelling convention?
Including a bulleted list of facts in the story
Reading an English language text from left to right
Presenting an “establishing” shot in a film or TV scene

Answer: Including a bulleted list of facts in the story


These are answers of Creating Dashboards and Storytelling with Tableau Week 4 Coursera Quiz


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These are answers of Creating Dashboards and Storytelling with Tableau Week 4 Coursera Quiz