If you are a student at a university, you can now get a free license for the full version of Tableau Desktop. No matter if you use it in class or for research, this is the full version that does not restrict the amount of data or the kind of connectivity (like Tableau Public does). The license is good for one year and can be renewed as long as you are enrolled at university.
This has been in the works for a while, and I’m very happy to finally see it happen. Tableau’s roots are in academia, so it only makes sense to make it available to students and faculty. There was a poorly advertised way of getting a discounted version of Tableau before, but that still cost a bit of money and required you to jump through some hoops. The new program asks you a minimum of information for verification, and is automated, so in most cases you will get your license within minutes. This is not restricted to the U.S. either, though verification can take a bit longer in that case.
Tableau for Students is different from Tableau for Teaching (TFT). The latter is specific to a particular course where Tableau is used as part of the teaching (I’ve used Tableau to teach Visual Analytics several times, for example). The licenses for TfT are limited to one semester, and you were not supposed to use them for research. That restriction no longer applies, and in fact we hope that you will find Tableau useful for your data analysis!
In Tableau Public we want you to be able to access you your data wherever it’s stored. That’s why you can connect directly from Tableau Public to Google Sheets. And if your Google Sheets data updates, you can set your viz to auto-refresh as often as once per day. Oct 1, 2018 - Free trial download for anyone. Product available to you. Student, Through Tableau for Students, full-time students can request FREE.
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Tableau for Teaching is not going away, though. If you are an instructor and are thinking about using Tableau for a course, get in touch! There are real, enthusiastic, awesome people who handle these emails, and they’re happy to give you licenses, answer questions, and help in any way they can. You can also contact me, if you want to talk to a grumpy ex-professor.
So if you’ve ever wanted to try Tableau, and you’re a student, this is your chance now.
Tableau Desktop Professional Edition 2018.2.3 Crack Students. November 18, 2018 By docksofts Leave a Comment. Tableau Desktop Full Version Free Download With Crack. The student licenses offered through the Tableau for Teaching program and distributed by instructors are typically valid for the duration of the course. If you are currently enrolled at an accredited academic institution, you are eligible for a free one-year license through the Tableau for Students Program. Submit a request here.
My masters degree has been languishing for years. I've completed all of the coursework and only needed to write a thesis. I just couldn't manage to prioritize it over writing jobs that actually paid me. And then Tableau Software reached out to me a couple weeks ago about their new initiative to help students and teachers begin using their desktop analytics product for free and, in turn, learn about big data hands on. Suddenly, I had a project I couldn't resist. A student's and teacher's guide to data analytics using Tableau with public datasets.
But wait a second. Why should 10th graders (or sixth graders for that matter) need to know about big data and analytics? And if they do, why use Tableau? Both questions are actually pretty easy to answer. In terms of why we should be teaching analytics (not just analytical thinking but formal analytics):
- Data analysis, management, and interpretation will arguably be the most critical skills students today face in the coming decades. In a time when rote knowledge is becoming increasingly useless, the ability to draw meaningful conclusions from floods of data will have applications across all industries and areas of life.
- Analytics, as it turns out, give us some of the easiest ways to integrate math and science across curricular areas. The possibilities for math instructors to co-teach units with an analytic component in both the social and hard sciences are pretty extraordinary.
- Analytics isn't just about math. It's about the interpretation and presentation of data in compelling ways. Thus, even for students who struggle with mathematics or fail to see its relevance can contribute meaningfully to design, messaging, persuasion, written interpretation, and other areas where the chance to connect engaging activities with real-world math and critical thought are easy to find.
- Teaching analytics works best with real, relevant data from any number of sources. These skills can be taught with everything from flu outbreak information to housing prices to geological survey data.
And why Tableau?
- It's free for students and teachers. The company just opened up the product to educational users last week:
Tableau Software today announced that it will make its flagship visual analytics product free to students currently enrolled at an accredited K-12 institution, college or university worldwide. Tableau for Students is a new program that provides licenses of Tableau Desktop Professional to students to enhance their studies and gain new skills. Tableau Academic Programs also include the Tableau for Teaching initiative, which offers educators software for their classrooms. Students should visit http://www.tableausoftware.com/academic/students to obtain a free product code and will be asked for information to verify their student status at an accredited institution.
- It's easy. There are sample datasets and reports included with the software, and information can easily be visualized by dragging and dropping 'dimensions' (categories or groupings of data), 'measures' (the variables), and 'parameters' (fields for subgrouping data) into a straightforward visual interface. Point to a data source, drag and/or define fields, arrange the fields in rows and columns, and choose the visual output. That's it. Even English teachers could do it.
- It's professional software. This isn't dumbed-down software for kids. It's the real tool used for data analytics by everyone from The New York Times to Charles Schwab.
Tableau Desktop Student
This is an incredible opportunity for schools to change the way students think about data and the information-driven world in which they live. It's also one heck of a potential catalyst for schools to really begin integrating STEM education with the rest of the curriculum. Focusing on STEM is all well and good, but making STEM an integral part of what schools do and demonstrating that, regardless of a student's individual interests, there are clear applications for math and science is far better.