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Transforming data to solve community problems

AMES, Iowa — Iowa State University students are pulling data from across the state to inform policymakers and decision-makers on some of the biggest challenges in Iowa.

Now in its third year, the Data Science for the Public Good Young Scholars Program engages undergraduate and graduate students to work on projects that address local and state government challenges. This summer, 12 students participated in the intensive training program, which was led by Iowa State University and ISU Extension and Outreach.

In September, three ISU graduate students (Harun Çelik, history; Romina Tafazzoli, community and regional planning; and Muskan Tantia, computer science) as well as Nayha Hussain, junior in computer science and economics at Clemson University, will present their team projects at the Learning and Doing Data for Good Conference at the University of Washington.

“We live in a world of data that takes on a variety of forms and often requires a diverse set of tools and technologies to allow us to analyze and visualize the information,” said Christopher J. Seeger, professor of landscape architecture and director of ISU Extension and Outreach’s Indicator Program.

“Just as important, however, is that we have a diverse set of educational backgrounds and experiences to help work through the data. This year, the 12 DSPG students represented nine different majors. The DSPG program brings together a mix of skill sets and disciplines and roots them around core data science principles to help build a future workforce that is prepared to take on new challenges in agriculture, economic development, health, education, community planning and society in general.”

The 2022 students’ final presentations can be viewed on the DSPG website, which includes projects from previous years.

Students worked on the following projects this summer:

Successful employment for Iowans with disabilities

Iowa’s policymakers, advocates, and grant-seekers often struggle to find and access data on disabilities. This makes it difficult to fully understand the complexities surrounding Iowans with disabilities and their success in employment.

To tackle data accessibility, students worked to discover, profile and present data pertaining to successful employment for Iowans with disabilities and to serve as a foundation for connecting various data sources on employment through the assessment of public services available to Iowans with disabilities.

The student team, led by Çelik:

Exploring measures to analyze local housing needs

Local housing decision-makers have three key concerns: availability, affordability and accessibility of housing for diverse demographic groups.

They need reliable and current data to help set housing policy priorities, but this information is often difficult to find all in one location. This process can also be complicated by time and budget limits, inflexible tabulation formats, lack of detail and time sensitivity in data sources.

The student team explored how much and what types of data are available to describe local housing markets and analyzed data sets from a wide variety of housing-related sources. Students developed a dashboard to provide a summary of the findings and visuals of housing-related indicators.

The student team, led by Tafazzoli:

Wholesale local food price benchmarking

Students developed a data platform that can be used to aggregate localized and up-to-date benchmarks on pricing of products in retail and wholesale spaces. This came in response to needs from the Iowa State Farm Food and Enterprise Development team, which is frequently asked for this information. Many specialty crop producers across Iowa are operating in direct-to-consumer retail spaces, making these data a necessity.

The student team, led by Tantia:

Three more DSPG student teams worked on the following projects: