Order to Crisis: Drive for Data Fuels In-demand Research Initiative

College Crisis Initiative Students and Chris Marsicano Meet Masked at Hub

Using data, Chris Marsicano (right) and his team of student researchers made sense of the extraordinary disruption the pandemic caused in higher ed.

On March 12, just hours after 蜜桃社区 announced a shift to remote instruction, Maddie Buitendorp strolled down the hallways of Chambers Building, savoring her last moments on campus.

She wound up in room 3015, the office of Educational Studies Professor Chris Marsicano, who had tweeted that he鈥檇 be there for any students who wanted to talk. 

Buitendorp 鈥22 and Mariscano knew each other well. She assisted Marsicano with research into higher education issues. As she sat down, a dispiriting thought shot through her mind.

 鈥淚 realized the research I鈥檇 been working on was suddenly irrelevant,鈥 she says.

Seniors Katie Felten and Luis Toledo鈥攁lso research assistants for Marsicano鈥攕howed up, too. 

鈥淲e were all unsure,鈥 Toledo says. 鈥淔or me, it was knowing that everything from that moment on was going to be different. I knew I wasn鈥檛 going to have a graduation. But I still wanted to work with this team that made 蜜桃社区 feel like home, feel like I had a sense of 蜜桃社区.鈥

That鈥檚 when the impromptu group therapy session turned into a group project.  

They had no idea that their work would turn them into sought-after pandemic advisors鈥攖hat their research would catapult them into news stories across the world and inform the rapidly changing pandemic response plans among colleges and universities, or that thousands of institutions and businesses that partner with higher ed would look to their research to navigate the new environment in schools from North Carolina to California.   

On that dark night, it was just students and their professor talking things out.

鈥淲e asked, 鈥楬ow can we maintain our work of making the world a better place?鈥欌 Marsicano says. 鈥淎nd we said, 鈥楲et鈥檚 look at what鈥檚 happening right now. The world needs more info on how colleges are responding to the pandemic.鈥欌

They left Marsicano鈥檚 office without a clear plan鈥攖hat would come鈥攂ut they knew that instead of fighting the tidal wave washing out the spring semester, they would swim with it. They would measure it. They would see what other schools were doing.

鈥淲e had three students who believe in 蜜桃社区 in my office that night,鈥 Marsicano says. 鈥淭hey wanted to do something. Within 48 hours, they had it: 鈥楲et鈥檚 collect data.鈥 And they wanted to do it for two reasons: One, it was a good idea. And two, it took our minds off of the situation.鈥

Chris Marsicano, Assistant Professor of the Practice in Educational Studies and 2010 蜜桃社区 graduate

New Trajectory

It wasn鈥檛 glamorous work. Felten, Toledo, Buitendorp and Marsicano checked thousands of schools鈥 websites and social media accounts for up-to-date coronavirus messaging. And because each institution鈥檚 website is different, there was no easily repeatable process.

鈥淲e originally thought we could get it done in five days,鈥 Felten says. 鈥淭hree weeks later, we finally finished.鈥

鈥淚 thought it would be something I could do with Netflix on in the background,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut by the end, I would turn everything off and just focus for hours.鈥

Yes, the work was occasionally mind-numbing, but it soaked up the free time that college students across the country were finding more of a curse than a blessing.

鈥淢y schedule was going to class, doing homework and then the rest of the time was data collection,鈥 Toledo says. 鈥淲herever I could fit it in鈥攎iddle of the day, late at night. In a way, my job was this research, and I would fit in my classwork where I could.鈥

While the student researchers gathered tens of thousands of data points, Marsicano opened a Google doc and started writing. 

鈥淔our weeks after our first virtual meeting, we had a working paper,鈥 he says.

That paper, 鈥淭racking Campus Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic鈥濃攃o-authored by Marsicano, Felten, Buitendorp and Toledo鈥攓uickly became the most-viewed preprint paper in the American Political Science Association鈥檚 history.

The attention not only validated their work, it launched them on a new trajectory. They had hit on something: A huge appetite for information about the disruption caused by the coronavirus.

鈥淏eing the most-downloaded paper was amazing,鈥 Buitendorp says. 鈥淣o one had seen this or been exposed to that kind of excitement. Reporters were calling. It was all over Twitter. People wanted the data. And that made it so real. All these hours on the web finally made sense. We weren鈥檛 just gathering data in our childhood bedrooms.鈥

National Partnerships

The paper caught the eye of John Barnshaw, vice president of research and data science for Ad Astra, a company that helps colleges build course schedules.

鈥淢arsicano鈥檚 team did a masterful job of demonstrating how flexible and resilient higher education can be in fulfilling its mission to students and their communities,鈥 Barnshaw says.

鈥淚 was so impressed with the paper that I reached out to Chris and over the course of the call, we realized we had so much in common interests that a partnership seemed like the next logical step.鈥

Ad Astra and Marsicano鈥檚 team partnered on a survey that went out to hundreds of registrars, expanding their reach and adding a crucial data set to their work.

Barnshaw says Ad Astra helped more than 500 higher education institutions transition to online-only operations. During that time, 鈥渨e did not have much of a chance to take a breath and think systematically about this work and how we might better align with the broader needs,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t is great to be a part of a team that helps align our work with the ongoing needs of all institutions of higher education.鈥

At the same time, Marsicano鈥檚 team made a fortuitous on-campus connection with Laurie Heyer, Kimbrough Professor of Mathematics. Heyer leads Project PRONTO++ (PRoductive ONline TOols), a group of student data scientists and programmers who use their skills to solve real-world problems.

And they knew right away that they could turbocharge the Marsicano team鈥檚 work.

As Felten put it, 鈥淭hey looked at us as if our heads had fallen off after we told them how we gathered the data.鈥

They called in Jake Carver 鈥21, a computer science and English double major, who鈥檇 developed web crawler programs that automatically scan websites for information. His expertise saved the C2i data collectors immeasurable time. 

Their task was easier said than done. The crawler had to be nimble enough to scan websites of massive state research universities and small liberal arts colleges鈥攁nd everything in between. Carver and computer science majors Brad Shook 鈥22 and Nathan Little 鈥21, embraced the challenge. 

鈥淚t was an amazing experience,鈥 Carver says. 鈥淚t expanded our boundaries of what we were comfortable doing. We became better programmers as a whole because we had a wide range of experience but had never put it all together. We had to think critically about what we should use at the right time.鈥

While Carver鈥檚 group streamlined data gathering, another team, led by Owen Bezick 鈥21 and Nathan Jordan 鈥22, created a dashboard that made the thousands of data points instantly understandable and customizable. 

If the data was sheet music, Bezick and his team made it sing.  

鈥淭he dashboard is absolutely essential to gleaning information and insight from the data,鈥 Heyer says. 鈥淭here would be much less excitement if people had to wade through this themselves, or there were just a few static graphs and charts.鈥

By mid-June, the combination of technology and timeliness had changed the ad hoc team of student researchers who came together in Marsicano鈥檚 office into something more permanent: , or C2i.

(And in late August, Bezick and Calvin Spencer 鈥21 used their newly developed skills to build the college鈥檚 official COVID-19 testing dashboard.)

Sharing Innovation

Marsicano鈥攚ho graduated from 蜜桃社区 with a political science degree in 2010鈥攊s a true believer in the liberal arts. It should come as little surprise when he points to Ferrara, a walled city an hour west of Venice, as inspiration for C2i. During the Black Death, Ferrara developed early models for contact tracing and thoughtful quarantine practices鈥攁nd suffered no deaths from the disease.

鈥淔errara innovated,鈥 Marsicano says. 鈥淐2i can be like Ferrara by asking questions and sharing innovation among higher education institutions.鈥

By collecting and offering the data in real-time, C2i became a resource for institutions planning their next moves in response to the pandemic; and it will inform how the higher education sector responds to future crises. 

鈥淭he uncertainty of COVID made information that was recent hugely valuable,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd it was truly one of those times when this data was not only useful; if we could help colleges plan more effectively, this data could actually save lives.鈥

The logo for C2i even pays homage to Ferrara, combining the city鈥檚 shield-shaped symbol with the colors of a stoplight.

C2i鈥檚 quick work attracted partners and sponsors. The Educational Credit Management Corporation Foundation, an influential higher ed funder, provided a $75,000 grant that allowed Marsicano to hire around 30 additional student researchers over the summer. That filled a critical need on the C2i team and also provided an opportunity for students at a time when internships and job offers withered in COVID-19鈥檚 wake. 

It was the first of many partnerships. C2i became the exclusive provider of COVID-19 data for The Chronicle of Higher Education, higher ed鈥檚 premier trade publication. 

Marsicano and the C2i researchers have become seasoned media voices, quoted in newspapers, magazines and websites around the world. The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, and the Economist are frequent users of the C2i data. On multiple occasions this Fall, Marsicano made good use of his coffee grinder and French press, staying up late to do radio spots for the BBC World Service and a live TV hit for a Pakistani news outlet. But usually, he has the student researchers answer media questions.

It鈥檚 a strategy that underscores how much the students have grown from their experience鈥攁nd from Marsicano鈥檚 deep faith in them.

鈥淚 have a friend who was shocked when I told her students were answering media questions,鈥 Marsicano says. 鈥淏ut they are ready鈥攁nd more than that, they were eager for the opportunity. I remembered how I felt as a senior at 蜜桃社区. I wanted to do important work. And even though it can be scary, the only way to conquer those nerves is to do it.鈥

Felten was quoted in Teen Vogue and on NPR, among others.

鈥淚 had moments where I took a call from a number I didn鈥檛 know鈥攁nd it was USA Today. That on-the-spot questioning is intense but what better experience could there be to prepare for job interviews? They鈥檙e calling to ask for your opinion鈥攖hat鈥檚 amazing,鈥 says Felten, who started as a Consulting Analyst at Huron Consulting Group in September.

Next Steps

The C2i team still measures and shares higher education鈥檚 pandemic ups and downs in real time. They are also seizing opportunities to expand its focus. After all, there will always be new crises in higher ed, even when the pandemic is finally a thing of the past. 

鈥淚nstitutions of higher education are pretty conservative by nature,鈥 Marsicano says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e loathe to change unless there鈥檚 a reason.

鈥淲ell, now you鈥檝e got a pandemic鈥攖he biggest reason in the world to change. But they don鈥檛 need to do it in a vacuum. We will stop focusing exclusively on COVID and more on crises in general.鈥

In September, for example, Buitendorp worked with a team of data collectors led by Emily Rounds 鈥21 to measure the impact of the California wildfires on schools on the west coast. 

鈥淓ven when we鈥檙e done with COVID, we鈥檒l keep working,鈥 she says. 鈥淢y goal is to make C2i invaluable to 蜜桃社区. If we had more time and more funding, we would expand into other areas. We want data that can shape higher ed for the better, data that can lead to positive change.鈥

Though it鈥檚 only been a few months since they founded C2i, Felten, Toledo and Buitendorp already speak about the project as the culmination of their education.

鈥淐2i taught me to step back and look at the big picture,鈥 says Toledo, now a Colby College admissions counselor. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really special; that at 蜜桃社区 we can be in a 蜜桃社区 where we can learn together. There鈥檚 that a-ha moment at 蜜桃社区, where you gather your knowledge; and you see how your corner of academia fits into the world. C2i was that moment for me.鈥

For Marsicano, the growth of the C2i student team has been his own dream come true.

鈥淓very professor wants to do two things: Attend a student鈥檚 wedding and see our students apply what they learned. I鈥檒l get to the weddings in time鈥攂ut this was thrilling because I could see them growing and putting their skills to work.鈥


This article was originally published in the Fall/Winter 2020 print issue of the 蜜桃社区 Journal Magazine; for more, please see the 蜜桃社区 Journal section of our website.

Published

  • January 8, 2021

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