Title: The Value and Use of Secondary Data
1The Value and Use of Secondary Data
2Why use secondary data?
- Kuhns (1970) scientific paradigm
- Replication and confirmation of results
- The foundation of the scientific process is that
research should build on previous work, - Sharing data and allowing for replication makes
ones work more likely to be taken seriously and
cited more frequently (King et al., 1995).
3Why use secondary data?
- The nature of large datasets virtually guarantees
that a single researcher or group of researchers
will not be able to use the dataset to its full
potential for a single project. - Utilizing secondary data ensures that resources
spent on data collection are put to the best use
possible and the public benefit is enhanced. - Great value for students, postdocs, junior
faculty (and others)
4Secondary Data and Graduate Students
- Why graduate students use secondary data
- Why graduate instructors use secondary data in
classroom - ICPSR disclaimer
5Graduate Students Users of Secondary Data at ICPSR
User Affiliations Spring 2005 2005 s Spring 2007 2007 s
Undergraduate Student 6535 25.8 27791 29.1
Graduate Student 10175 40.1 34023 35.6
University/College Faculty 4111 16.2 15602 16.3
University/College Staff Member 1113 4.4 4045 4.2
Research Organization 840 3.3 3336 3.5
Federal Government 341 1.3 1167 1.2
Local Government 295 1.2 1003 1.0
State Government 245 1.0 966 1.0
News Organization 100 0.4 408 0.4
Treatment Service Provider 118 0.5 354 0.4
Other 1492 5.9 6876 7.2
TOTALS 25365 95571
6Common Uses of Secondary Data
- Class Assignments
- Class Papers
- Replication
- Original Analyses
- Student Presentations and Publications
- Sole author
- Co-authored with faculty
- Co-authored with students
- Theses and Dissertations
7Replication Publication
- A replication study is a valuable way to meet the
goals of a graduate course (Gary King, 2006) - get published
- help professionalize students into the discipline
- teach the scientific norms of the free exchange
of academic information. -
8Replication Publication
- Elements of a replication paper (King 2006)
- Address a substantive problem in your field of
interest - Begin by locating an article in your field,
acquiring the data used in the article, and
replicating the specific numerical results in the
tables and/or figures in that analysis - Describe the extent to which you were able to
replicate the authors results - After replicating, try to improve the
presentation of the original results. - Next, run some controlled methodological
experiments designed to advance the state of
knowledge about the substantive project.
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19Secondary Data at ICPSR
- Finding Data For Classes, Projects, Papers and
Presentations - Basic Search
- Browsing the Collection
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25Preview of Part II
- Paula Lantz Americans Changing Lives
- James McNally National Archive on Computerized
Data on Aging - Frank Stafford Panel Study of Income Dynamics
- Felicia LeClere Minority Data Resource Center
and Data Sharing for Demographic Research
26Thank you
- Amy Pienta
- apienta_at_umich.edu