Statistics and Society
Undergraduate research tends to evoke images of either a library or a laboratory. The Data Analysis and Social Inquiry Lab (DASIL) offers students in social studies and the humanities something different. The lab has computers with statistical analysis programs that can help students and faculty understand trends in data and visually represent data in charts and graphs and on maps.
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DASIL helps students and faculty analyze and visualize data on an individual basis and brings data analysis into the classroom. It also provides experiential learning for student tutors. 鈥淲e do the students a disservice unless we make sure they have some level of technological understanding,鈥 says Kathy Kamp, professor of anthropology and Earl D. Strong Professor of Social Studies. DASIL is a unique program in that it is staffed by undergraduates.
鈥淲hen we鈥檙e not helping students,鈥 says Beau Bressler 鈥16, a DASIL staffer, 鈥渨e鈥檙e working on projects for faculty 鈥 usually gathering or organizing data.鈥
Last year, DASIL launched that hosts a number of data visualizations. Most of the visualizations make use of publicly available 鈥 usually government-collected 鈥 information.
One of the projects DASIL is taking on is an interactive map tracking land-holding, using historical records, in three Iowa townships in Poweshiek and Jasper counties.
An earlier major project DASIL was involved in was English professor James Lee鈥檚 , an analysis of 25,000 texts from 1470 to 1700 using data mining techniques to visualize the specific language Shakespeare's England employed to describe different races and places across the globe before colonialism.
Learning by Teaching
Bressler has worked at DASIL for more than a year. During his time there, he has assisted students and professors and has done his own research for a Mentored Advanced Project (MAP). As an economics major, he works primarily on econometrics problems. The students who work with DASIL are fairly specialized, says Julia Bauder, social studies and data services librarian. 鈥淲e try to have a student fluent in geographical information systems, an economics major who has taken econometrics, a mathematics major, and at least one person doing qualitative research and able to use NVivo qualitative analysis software.鈥
鈥淪ometimes people come and they know what they want to research and what they鈥檙e trying to do, but they don鈥檛 know the software or don鈥檛 know what variables to use,鈥 says Bressler. 鈥淚 plan on going into research, so being exposed to other students鈥 research prepares me to do a broader array of research.鈥 In the spring semester, Bressler helped Ope Awe 鈥15 analyze data for a MAP to determine what factors in a developing country influence entrepreneurship.
鈥淒ASIL is a place you can come and learn to work with data,鈥 says Bressler. 鈥淲orking with people 鈥 especially when they鈥檙e other students who know how to work with data 鈥 can make statistics easier to understand.鈥
Beau Bressler 鈥16 is an economics major from San Diego, Calif.