缅北强奸

PODS Spotlight 2018: Juliette Deshormes

Hola! I鈥檓 Juliette, although most people call me Juju, and I have just graduated from 缅北强奸 with a joint honours degree in Political Science and International Development Studies with a minor in Hispanic Studies. Despite my recent graduation, I'm not quite done with 缅北强奸 yet - I'm currently a Policy & Data Science (PODS) Fellow! PODS is a summer program designed to train a new generation of data-driven policy analysts.

I found out about PODS rather unexpectedly, having burst into the Arts Internship Office panicked about what my next steps would be once I鈥檇 left the security and comfort of the cocoon that is university. The internship coordinator mentioned that an amazing new initiative was launching this summer, lead by the Centre of Social and Cultural Data Science partnered with the Max Bell School of Public Policy.

Given that I have never thought of myself as a data scientist, or a 鈥渃oder鈥 as I like to tell all my friends back home, I wasn鈥檛 sure whether PODS would be for me. My past experiences had always been very people-oriented and practical, often involving me collecting the data rather than analysing it. I鈥檇 worked with some leading defenders of human rights through Equitas鈥檚 IHRTP, interviewed refugees and internally displaced persons through the UNHCR in Ecuador, pitched ideas to donors through French NGO Enfants et Dev茅loppement, and documented protestors for an upcoming documentary I鈥檓 making on the rise of the far right in Quebec. As you can see, none of these experiences really screamed 鈥渆xpert computer scientist鈥.

But that鈥檚 why PODS is so great: they don鈥檛 want the expert computer scientists. They want people with a wide range of backgrounds and experiences who wouldn鈥檛 have otherwise come into contact with the more 鈥渢echy鈥 stuff. Despite the intimidating schedule we received on the first day, which included learning objectives such as 鈥渕ultivariate regression鈥 and 鈥渟tatistical inference鈥 (don鈥檛 worry, I still don鈥檛 fully understand these), I have to come to understand how intrinsically linked data analysis is to every single part of our lives. For instance, my PODS internship at Prospered Project, based at the Institute for Health and Social Policy, involves using data to analyze how effective a national child support program, India鈥檚 Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS), has been in reaching its objectives in providing care and education to young mothers and children. It has been really interesting to be on the other end of a research project 鈥 using my new quantitative analysis skills to go deeper into the issue and present a well-researched report based on hard facts, evidence, and graphs (lots and lots of graphs).

Pushing past the stereotype of your average hacker, I can already see how invaluable the skills I have been taught will be to me in whichever future career I decide to pursue. Whilst learning to code has offered me an unprecedented sense of accomplishment (it鈥檚 very gratifying to see a screen full of seemingly jumbled characters and actually understand what鈥檚 going on), the PODS program has also given us countless opportunities to explore our interests, meet experts in their field and form a network which I think will continue long after these 3 months are over.

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