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summit room with crowd

More than 90 people participated in the 2019 IRIS Summit, either in person or remotely, representing a 50% increase from last year. We’re extremely pleased that so many attendees were able to join us for an expanded summit, which featured parallel tracks on data, research, and policy, resulting in a truly rich set of conversations.

Nearly 50 organizations were represented at the summit:

  • 20 IRIS staff and faculty
  • 3 IRIS board members
  • Representatives from 21 IRIS member universities
  • 7 prospective IRIS member universities
  • University Research Corridor
  • U.S. Census Bureau
  • National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics
  • Association of American Universities
  • Association of Public and Land-grant Universities
  • Association of American Medical Colleges
  • Unizen
  • RTI International
  • Bureau van Dijk
  • Equifax Workforce Solutions

We developed the three tracks for the conference based on input from attendees at the 2018 summit, who asked for a greater diversity of focus. Initial feedback from this year’s summit indicate this was a successful approach, allowing participants to dive deeply into topics of personal interest and also providing high-level overviews relevant to the entire group.

The data track highlighted work being carried out by the IRIS team to enhance linkage, to propose a new approach to job title classification, and to improve matching and reporting of award data, each highlighting challenges and innovative solutions. The data plenary highlighted not only the importance of aggregation in terms of reporting, but also underscored philosophical approaches to thinking about it, on two axes: global to local, and general to specific.

The research track featured the work of a wide variety of researchers accessing UMETRICS data to answer a diverse set of research questions. The research plenary featured a discussion of evi- dence-based policy and the work of the Coleridge Initiative at NYU to link UMETRICS and SED/SDR data, followed by an overview of research focusing on resource allocations across principal investigators. The sessions underscored the notion that UMETRICS is about capturing insights about people.

The policy track highlighted some compelling examples of the ways in which IRIS UMETRICS data can be used to augment efforts already under way. Presenters discussed the ways in which funding decisions are made about research, how graduate schools can track student outcomes, and an example of storytelling that was deeply touching. The policy plenary featured a panel of presenters from three major higher education organizations during which the conversation underscored the importance of messaging. Representatives also underscored the demand for accountability and the need to have data that can tell the story.

We also identified several broad themes at this year’s Summit that resonated across the tracks.

Expansion and integration. There was a general sense that our community – which includes data providers, researchers, and policy makers – is becoming more expansive and integrated, with a deeper understanding of the interconnections between the general areas of focus. Whether we are submitting data or parsing it to answer a question or using it to tell a story to a key stakeholder, we all benefit when we understand how we fit into the bigger picture.

Exploring new questions and storytelling. Enhanced data cleaning and new data linkages enable researchers to ask new questions of the data, and permit decision makers to dive deep into the data to help tell their stories. There was also a recognition that research universities have a great opportunity to make our case through data-driven stories that IRIS can help discover.

Aggregation and transformation. The real power of data like UMETRICS is in the ability to combine them with other, related datasets to better explore more fine-grained experiences and outcomes. In doing so, we can transform simple datasets that allow us to track purchases or grant awards into data resources that can help us better understand priorities, interdisciplinarity, and the function of science.

Mark your calendars! The 2020 IRIS Summit is slated for September 24-25. Look for more details to come, and reach out to Nancy Calvin-Naylor at nbirk@umich.edu if you would be interested in serving on a planning committee.