Data Science Student Wins Poster Competition
Researchers involved in the Arkansas NSF EPSCoR DART program met recently at the Data Analytics that are Robust and Trusted All Hands Meeting and Student Poster Competition in Little Rock. Abby Willard, a rising data science honors junior, won first place in the poster competition at the conference.
Willard’s project, which included help from her faculty adviser, Karl Schubert, and her staff adviser, Lee Shoultz, involved creating data science case studies for other colleges and universities in the “Data Science for Arkansas (DS4A)” ecosystem to help kick-start their courses and programs. This project is important and insightful as the Data Science Program at the U of A, which launched in the fall of 2020, is the first of its kind in the state of Arkansas. Willard’s award-winning poster, titled “NSF EPSCoR PI Team Case Study Project,” earned her a prize of $1,000 to be used toward attending a future conference of her choice.
Karl Schubert, associate director of the Data Science Program at the U of A, said, “I am very proud of Abby and her contribution to our state-wide data science ecosystem, ‘Data Science for Arkansas,’ as recognized by her winning poster. Her work is helping us and our two-year and four-year data science program partners with sample case studies with real-world data and real-world problems.”
About DART: In 2020, the Arkansas Economic Development Commission’s Division of Science and Technology, in partnership with the U of A and eight other colleges and universities, was awarded a $20 million grant from the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR). The grant is matched by $4 million from the state. As a result, researchers established a program titled “Data Analytics That Are Robust and Trusted,” or DART. DART is designed to address fundamental barriers to practical application and acceptance of modern data analytics, learning and prediction, any one of which could derail or impede its full development and contributions. DART will also establish a statewide data science educational ecosystem by defining a combination of model programs, degrees, pedagogy and curriculum; providing resources and training for K20 educators; providing educational opportunities inside and outside the classroom for K20 students; and ensuring broad participation to impact the state’s pipeline of data science skilled workers.
DART Participating Institutions
- Arkansas State University, Beebe
- Arkansas State University, Mountain Home
- Arkansas State University
- Black River Technical College
- Cossatot Community College of the University of Arkansas
- NorthWest Arkansas Community College
- Philander Smith College (HBCU)
- Shorter College (HBCU)
- Southern Arkansas University Tech
- Southern Arkansas University
- University of Arkansas Community College at Batesville
- University of Arkansas Community College at Morrilton
- University of Arkansas Pulaski Technical College
- University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
- University of Arkansas, Fayetteville (MSI)
- University of Arkansas, Little Rock
- University of Arkansas, Pine Bluff (HBCU)
- University of Central Arkansas
This story also appeared in the University of Arkansas News publication.
CONTACTS
Karl D. Schubert, professor of practice and associate director
Data Science
479-575-2264, schubert@uark.edu
Lee Shoultz, program manager
Data Science
479-575-5469, eshoultz@uark.edu