ICPSR 2019 - 2020 Annual Report
July 1, 2019 - June 30, 2020
From ICPSR Director Margaret Levenstein
On March 13, 2020, ICPSR transitioned to fully remote operations in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Our staff immediately moved to make sure that we could all continue our work, and they made sure that our members, most of whom were also making the same transition to working — and teaching — from home, had access to ICPSR resources. The staff and instructors in the Summer Program in Quantitative Methods of Social Research quickly pivoted to offer our first-ever fully virtual Summer Program. While we missed seeing our instructors and participants at Summer Picnics and all the other outside-the-classroom events, the Summer Program maintained the same curricular offerings online, and served more students than ever before.
While working from home, we persevered, continuing to serve our members and our mission. We continued to expand our data offerings, building on new collaborations and strengthening old ones. We also persevered in the ongoing work of modernizing our platform to improve the experience of our data users and our data depositors. We set our intention to care for one another as well, as people juggled radically changed familial responsibilities, isolation and fear, and serious health challenges.
At the end of May, ICPSR watched in horror, along with the rest of the world, the video of the brutal murder of George Floyd. At its June 10 meeting, the ICPSR Council observed 8 minutes and 46 seconds of silence in Mr. Floyd's memory. ICPSR has long been committed to making its data and its training activities useful to the community in a way that embraces diversity and encourages inclusion — from its Resource Center for Minority Data to its Summer Program Diversity Fellows. ICPSR is committed to fighting individual and institutional racism. To us, this means a commitment to making our staff and our consortium inclusive, so that our organization lives the values that it promotes, and that in its leadership in the research data community, it promotes equity, access, and inclusiveness.
ICPSR launched an important collaboration with the federal statistical system to support access to data for evidence-building. ResearchDataGov responds to the requirements of the Evidence-Based Policy Act of 2018 by providing a single portal for anyone looking to access confidential data from Federal Statistical Research Data Centers.
Our collaboration with American Economic Association supports its implementation of a policy requiring pre-publication sharing and replication of all analytic results. As of this writing, AEA has added 3,409 studies to openICPSR and improved the discoverability and the preservation of critical resources that inform modern economic analyses.
The collaborations mentioned above are just two examples of many that we know will improve the transparency and reproducibility of social science research. We are honored to help lead efforts to build knowledge of the social world, while also building trust and accountability around facts and evidence.
From ICPSR Council Chair Lisa D. Cook
Before the pandemic started, we were preparing for March 2020 to be a historic time at ICPSR. The Council was set to meet March 12-13. StoryCorps was on-site to record some of ICPSR's oral history, as part of ICPSR's award package after receiving the National Medal for Museum & Library Service in 2019. Then, suddenly, states quickly made moves to try to stem the spread of COVID-19, and the pandemic was declared by the World Health Organization. The Council meeting ended up being virtual, and members of the StoryCorps team were immediately called back to their home states. It was a scary time, to say the least. The ICPSR staff, as a whole, had their last day in the office on Friday, March 13, 2020. The move to working from home was relatively smooth, and the ICPSR data community received continuous access to data and resources.
At the close of the fiscal year, ICPSR staff were busy planning the 2020 Data Fair, set for September 2020, rising to the moment with topics including elections, Black Lives Matter, the Census, higher education, immigration, COVID-19, and so much more. Maggie indicated that although ICPSR has been working remotely, the staff has continued to grow and has secured new projects in data collection, data archives, and data stewardship. It was awe-inspiring to see the institution pivot to its first-ever virtual ICPSR Summer Program, which drew a record number of participants.
The Consortium has been managed exceptionally well in this tumultuous time, and it will continue to move forward in the coming year.
New Initiatives
- American Opportunity Study (Sponsor: Goldman Sachs Philanthropy Fund)
- HNDS-I: Decennial Census Linkage Project (Sponsor: National Science Foundation)
- Advancing the American Opportunity Study (Sponsor: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation)
- Curation, Linkage, and Dissemination of the Flint Registry (Sponsor: Michigan State University; Prime Sponsor: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
- Application Portal for Restricted Data in Federal Statistical System (Sponsor: U.S. Census Bureau)
- Archiving of 2011, 2012, and 2015 NISVS Data (Sponsor: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
- Housing and Children's Healthy Development (HCHD) (Sponsor: Johns Hopkins University)
- Campus Survey on Sexual Assault and Sexual Misconduct, 2019 (Sponsor: Association of American Universities)
- Open Science Data Repository for PCORI (Sponsor: Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute)
- Technical Support to Mindset Scholars Network for Measures on Effective Teaching (MET) (Sponsor: New Venture Fund)
- Developing a Data Archiving Website for the Mindset Scholars Network (Sponsor: New Venture Fund)
- MCC Evaluation Data Platform Project (Sponsor: Millennium Challenge Corporation)
- ACF Privacy and Confidentiality Analysis Support (Sponsor: Westat, Inc; Prime Sponsor: U.S. Administration for Children and Families)
- Developing Evidence-based Data Sharing and Archiving Policies (Sponsor: National Science Foundation)
- ResearchDataGov: Single point of entry, platform, and process for requesting access to restricted-use microdata (Sponsor: National Science Foundation)
- College and Beyond II: Outcomes of a Liberal Arts Education, Phase II (Andrew W. Mellon Foundation)
Educational Activities
The 2020 ICPSR Summer Program served more students than ever before, with 1,061 participants.
Summer Program
The 2020 ICPSR Summer Program in Quantitative Methods of Social Research, went fully virtual, and persevered to much success! At a glance, it included:
- 60 four-week sessions online:
- 32 workshops
- 12 lectures
- 16 Blalock lectures
- 38 statistical short workshops
- 4 substantive short workshops
- 1,061 participants, 98 instructors, 52 teaching assistants
This was the third year of ICPSR Summer Program Diversity Fellowship Initiative to facilitate the methodological training of graduate students from underrepresented groups. The program received 204 applications, awarding 18 scholarships (compared to 31 Diversity Scholarship Awards in 2019). The reduced awards were due to the expiration of a grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
The ICPSR Research Paper Competition had three winners in 2020.
- Jessica J Cox, (Sociology/Anthropology) of Elizabethtown College, earned First Place in the Undergraduate Competition with a paper titled "A Force to Be Reckoned With: The Effects of Social Media Usage on the Views of Police."
- Rachel Bickelman, (Sociology/Anthropology and Psychology) of Elizabethtown College, earned Second Place in the Undergraduate Competition with a paper titled "Down and Working in the Dumps: The Effects of Job Satisfaction and Work Stress on Depression."
- Ruiqian Li, (Sociology of Religion) of Baylor University, earned First Place in the Master's Competition with a paper titled "What Kind of Nationalist are You?: A Comprehensive Statistical Modeling for Understanding Public Opinion for Muslims among White Americans."
Size of ICPSR's Holdings as of 30-Jun-2020
On-Demand (Every file in each of these studies is downloadable) |
|||
---|---|---|---|
Total | Members | Public | |
Studies | 8467 | 5295 | 3172 |
Datasets | 70955 | 31764 | 39191 |
Files | 220057 | 90942 | 129115 |
ASCII data files | 40505 | 23678 | 16827 |
SAS setup and transport files | 40641 | 15814 | 24827 |
SPSS setup, portable, and system files | 32117 | 13315 | 18802 |
Stata setup, system, and dictionary files | 46750 | 17118 | 29632 |
Documentation files (public, by definition) | 21985 | 21985 |
Restricted (Each of these studies has at least one file that is not downloadable) |
|||
---|---|---|---|
Total | Members | Public | |
Studies | 2064 | 166 | 1898 |
Datasets | 10469 | 634 | 9835 |
Files | 94505 | 6707 | 87798 |
ASCII data files | 7951 | 564 | 7387 |
SAS setup and transport files | 19047 | 1373 | 17674 |
SPSS setup, portable, and system files | 14026 | 1078 | 12948 |
Stata setup, system, and dictionary files | 23616 | 1627 | 21989 |
Documentation files (public, by definition) | 18934 | 18934 |
Webinars
ICPSR broadcasted over 26 webinars with more than 1,143 attendees in fiscal year 2019-2020. They included:
- ICPSR - a data resource for US studies and more
- Accessing and Using two Disability/Rehabilitation Studies for Secondary Analysis: Boston RISE and Early Intervention - Colorado
- Trusted Repository Certification
- CivicLEADS: The resource you didn't know your research needed
- Resources for Gerontological and Social Science Researchers from NACDA
- An Overview of the 2020 ICPSR Summer Program
- Necessary Tension - Promoting Data Access While Protecting Privacy
- French and German Data at ICPSR: New Opportunities for Comparative Cross-Country Research
- Combined Datasets: Greater Than the Sum of Their Parts
- Quantifying the Arts & Creativity: Exploring the National Endowment for the Arts Data Archive
- Data in the News: Covering the 2020 Census
- An overview of the 2020 SRC Summer Institute in Survey Research Techniques
- Hands-on Teaching with FRED: A Partners in Quantitative Literacy Webinar for Love Data Week
- Aging with Cerebral Palsy: Health Outcomes and Management
- The Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) Study - Accessing and Using the MIDUS Data
- Help, I'm teaching remotely! Online data resources from ICPSR
- ICPSR: A data resource for papers, research and more
- Maximizing Your ICPSR Membership Value for German National Membership institutions
- Maximizing Research Impact with The National Addiction & HIV Data Archive Program (NAHDAP)
- Harnessing the Geospatial Components in Social Science Research Data
- NIA Data Management Plans - Help and Resources for Researchers
- How to Access and Use the Migrant and Seasonal Head Start Study Restricted-use Data Sets
- Hidden Gems of ICPSR - A Peek Into the Data Vault
- Moving beyond the title: Evaluating the data you find
Webinar videos and slides are available on the ICPSR YouTube channel.
Membership Trends
Biennial Meeting
Web Presence
Visitors to the ICPSR website:
- Users: 553,510
- New Users: 549,225
- New Visitors: 83 percent
- Returning Visitors: 17 percent
- Sessions: 880,862
- Page Views: 5,189,543
Financial Report
Conferences
ICPSR attended 11 conferences, which included:
- American Sociological Association (ASA) in New York, New York (August 2019)
- Gerontological Society of America's Annual Scientific Meeting (GSA) in Austin, Texas (November 2019)
- Southern Political Science Association (SPSA) in San Juan, Puerto Rico (January 2020)
Note: Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, ICPSR was not able to travel to in-person conferences after February 2020. Some archives participated in virtual conferences by presenting papers live or by submitting recordings and posters for virtual participants to view. ICPSR will continue participating virtually until it is safe to travel and engage with our ICPSR members and community.
Top Downloads
Rank | Study |
---|---|
1 | National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health), 1994-2008 [Public Use] |
2 | India Human Development Survey-II (IHDS-II), 2011-12 |
3 | Midlife in the United States (MIDUS 1), 1995-1996 |
4 | Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study [United States] Restricted-Use Files |
5 | Midlife in the United States (MIDUS 2), 2004-2006 |
6 | Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study [United States] Public-Use Files |
7 | India Human Development Survey (IHDS), 2005 |
8 | Midlife in the United States (MIDUS 3), 2013-2014 |
9 | Collaborative Psychiatric Epidemiology Surveys (CPES), 2001-2003 [United States] |
10 | National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 2014 |
11 | National Crime Victimization Survey, [United States], 2016 |
12 | Youth Development Study, 1988-2011 [St. Paul, Minnesota] |
13 | Survey of Inmates in State and Federal Correctional Facilities, [United States], 2004 |
14 | National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), 2007-2008 |
15 | Uniform Crime Reporting Program Data [United States]: 1975-1997 |
Headlines
- 2020 Data Resource Page: Coronavirus, Activism, Policing, Census, Elections, and More
- Happy Birthday, ICPSR Bibliography!
- ICPSR Director issues statement on continued support to data community amid global Coronavirus battle
- NSF selects AERA and ICPSR to create new STEM research data hub
- ICPSR announces ResearchDataGov portal to streamline researchers? access to Federal Statistical System microdata
- African Studies Center and Institute for Social Research partner on Summer Program scholarship
- ICPSR launches new repository for COVID-19 data
- ICPSR and Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness launch revamped Registry of Efficacy and Effectiveness Studies (REES)
- Announcing the new Child and Family Data Archive!
- (Re)Introducing the Health and Medical Care Archive (HMCA)
- A new resource for undergraduate education: Data on the content and consequences of a liberal arts education
- $1 million in grant funding for groundbreaking research on data curation
- A new distinction for ICPSR: CoreTrustSeal Certification!
- Data-PASS Alliance supports NSF ?Dear Colleague Letter: Effective Practices for Data"
- ICPSR announces recipients of the 2019 Warren E. Miller and William H. Flanigan awards
People
ICPSR honored the participants in two projects as the 2020 ICPSR Innovators of the Year. The Love Data Week event, which includes a popular Adopt a Dataset campaign (and DataJeff) was a collaboration between staffers on the Membership and Communications Team. The Curation Cycle Times tracking project was the work of an innovative ICPSR data curator.
ICPSR Council Members Katherine Wallman (United States Office of Management and Budget), Esther Wilder (Lehman College, City University of New York), Elizabeth Groff (Temple University), Verna Keith (Texas A&M University), ICPSR Director Margaret Levenstein, Bobray Bordelon (Princeton University), Council Chair Michael Jones-Correa (University of Pennsylvania), incoming Council Chair Lisa Cook (Michigan State University), Jane Fry (Carleton University), Lindsey Malcom-Piqueux (University of Southern California), and Jon E. Cawthorne (Wayne State University), gathered for one last photo together at the Fall 2019 ICPSR Council Meeting.
In Fall 2019, six new members were elected to serve four-year terms on the ICPSR Council: Dave Armstrong (Western University), James Doiron (University of Alberta Libraries), Mark Hansen (Columbia University), Kristin R. Eschenfelder (University of Wisconsin-Madison), Trevon Logan (Ohio State University), and Ken Smith (University of Utah).