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“Data from national surveys: access, analysis, and sharing”
Professor Anthony C. Masi Provost Professor of Sociology McGill University 16 May 2007
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Three perspectives on these issues and questions
Researcher Teacher Administrator 16 May 2007
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Trained as a social demographer, so data sets are important
Censuses Labour force surveys Social survey Special surveys: Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices World Fertility Survey National Demographic Surveys National Election Surveys 16 May 2007
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Trained as a social demographer, so computers are important
IBM punch cards and card sorter various models of mainframe and mini-computers stand-alone personal computers networked personal computers various configurations of file servers with mass storage devices 16 May 2007
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Trained as a social demographer, statistical programs are important
Fortran SPSS and SAS for the mainframe Minitab, Gauss, STATA, S-plus, R-plus spreadsheets other specialised programs 16 May 2007
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Trained as a social demographer, so I need (and expect to get) great assistance regarding
Data sets: How does one get the kind of data that can be turned into useful information to advance knowledge? Computers: Are there certain machines and/or configurations that best serve the needs of social scientists and data analysts? Application programs: What statistical software can be employed most efficiently to answer significant questions about the available data? 16 May 2007
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Researcher Experiences with data sets from four countries: U.S.A.
Italy Canada Sweden 16 May 2007
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United States of America
Census data Public use samples Current population survey General Social Survey Special surveys 16 May 2007
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Italy Census data Labour force survey General social survey
Special surveys European family panel data (Research Fellow at ISTAT) 16 May 2007
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Canada Census data CANSIM Labour force survey General social survey
Special surveys (StatCan with SCB) (member of the National Statistics Council) 16 May 2007
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Sweden Labour force survey Special survey (SCB with StatCan)
16 May 2007
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By comparison Canada has the pick of the litter of this subset of world class statistical agencies: survey and sampling methodologies efficient data collection good analytics and partnerships with academia learning that access and confidentiality can go together 16 May 2007
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Teacher: from concepts to operationalisation
learning objectives appropriate tools 16 May 2007
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Learning objectives informed consumers capable producers
critical analysts know the difference between education and training 16 May 2007
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Appropriate tools classroom and computer laboratory structures
social statistics lab, faculty computer facilities, electronic data resource services software tools local, networked, server-based applications and appropriate site-licensing arrangements the right stuff: data on demand campus-based research data centre 16 May 2007
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Administrator support alliances data issues training models
16 May 2007
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Support the right initiatives at the right time
with the right level of resources delivery of data services 16 May 2007
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Alliances funding agencies statistical agencies
universities and research institutes 16 May 2007
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Data issues infrastructure requirements repositories
storing and preserving data data preservation and distribution privacy, confidentiality, anonymity access complex survey designs and statistical analysis 16 May 2007
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Training and support: professional best practices
libraries and librarians data liberation initiative special purpose centres social statistics labs and RDCs special courses and instruction summer data and statistics programs on-line: any time, any where, any device CANSIM 16 May 2007
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Models sharing and distributing “middleware” for identity management
ICPSR example public opinion data archives institutional repositories “middleware” for identity management 16 May 2007
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Canada’s Research data centre (RDC) initiative (1)
promote and facilitate social science research provide secured access to Statistics Canada confidential micro-data survey files protect confidentiality of respondents disseminate findings of research to the policy community and the public costs and benefits balanced SSHRCC, CIHR, CFI, STATCAN, universities social research capacity 16 May 2007
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Canada’s Research Data Centre (RDC) initiative: benefits (2)
generate a wide perspective on Canada’s social landscape develop a network of research centres build on the data liberation initiative and expand collaboration train a new generation of Canadian data specialists 16 May 2007
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Canada’s Research data centre (RDC) initiative: data sets (3)
Aboriginal people’s survey Canadian community health survey Ethnic diversity survey General social survey Longitudinal survey of immigrants to Canada National graduates survey 16 May 2007
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Canada’s Research data centre (RDC) initiative: data sets (4)
National longitudinal survey of children and youth National population health survey Participation and activity limitation survey Survey of labour and income dynamics Workplace and employee survey Youth in transition survey 16 May 2007
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The role of IASSIST (1) three communities advanced infrastructures
researchers information specialists computer experts advanced infrastructures knowledge transfer 16 May 2007
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The role of IASSIST (2) education outreach advocacy
professional development opportunities Initiatives outreach partnerships advocacy access to data data documentation digital preservation 16 May 2007
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Discussion progress and challenges information overload
what we have and how it compares data definitions content searching formats archives web-based initiatives quality assurance issues and metrics 16 May 2007
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Have a productive and fun conference. Enjoy McGill and Montreal.
Thank you. Have a productive and fun conference. Enjoy McGill and Montreal. 16 May 2007
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