The College of Arts and Sciences (CAS) generously provides funds to support an experiential learning initiative for undergraduate students to apply data science and computational skills to studying and building solutions to social problems. The Center for Innovation in Social Science (CISS) will partner with BU Spark! X-Lab (Experience Lab) to match selected faculty, postdoctoral, and graduate student research projects with undergraduate technical teams who will apply data science and computational skills to the project. CISS and BU Spark! will provide a shared cohort experience and technical mentoring for the interns. The undergraduate Spark! teams will carry out the faculty research and participate in the mentored program between January through August 2025. Faculty applicants should indicate whether they are seeking support for Spring ’25, Summer I ‘25, Fall ’25 or more than one term.
Projects can cover the following computing and data science applications:
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Data science: data collection (e.g., web scraping, Application Programming Interface (APIs), merging datasets, converting data from various formats), data cleaning, data analysis, data visualization, etc.
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Machine learning: supervised or unsupervised learning, computer vision, deep learning, natural language processing, large language models, etc.
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Web and mobile app development and user experience design.
Applications are due Tuesday January 7, 2025 at this link. Faculty, full-time lecturers, postdoctoral fellows, and PhD students are eligible to apply. Recipients of 2023 and 2024 pilot grants also are eligible to apply for participation in the 2025 program. Applications will be reviewed by CISS and BU Spark! leadership and evaluated on the basis of: (a) clarity of research goals; (b) clear articulation of desired project deliverables; (c) project feasibility and data access (d) project aims that are a strong fit with current student intern interests and skills. Student intern time expectations will vary depending upon the project.
Expectations for Project Partners:
*All projects provided should be discretely defined with clear deliverables.
*Partners should be able to meet weekly or bi-weekly with student teams throughout the project duration for updates and consultation.
*Participate in an end-of-program showcase event of projects.
If you are interested in proposing a project but would like further information about how you might work with Spark! to carry out the project, please reach out to Seth Villegas (sethvill@bu.edu), Lecturer, Faculty of Computing & Data Sciences.
CISS director
Deborah Carr and BU Spark! Director
Ziba Cranmer will host an informational and Q&A session on
Wednesday December 18 from 4-5 pm. Please register here. We will provide examples of the types of projects that social scientists bring to BU Spark!, the specific tasks carried out by student teams, and suggestions on how to structure a successful application. Speakers include past grant recipients
Tatiana Padilla (CISS Postdoctoral Scholar; “Community Impacts of Immigration Raids”) and
Kajia Schilde (Associate Professor of International Relations, Pardee School; “
Dual Role of Contractors: Regulation and Creation”).
To learn more about BU Spark!, click here.
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