Federal Data Users

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  • 1.  The Data We Take for Granted: Telling the Story of How Federal Data Benefits American Lives and Livelihoods

    Posted 06-20-2025 02:10 PM

    Hi all --

    We're on the lookout for short, tangible stories about how federal data benefit everyday Americans. Read my blog post about it that went live today below, and please take a few minutes to submit your own story about how your favorite dataset is improving American lives and livelihoods!

    The Data We Take for Granted: Telling the Story of How Federal Data Benefits American Lives and Livelihoods

    06.20.25|6 min read| Text by Denice Ross

    Across the nation, researchers, data scientists, policy analysts and other data nerds are anxiously monitoring the demise of their favorite federal datasets. Meanwhile, more casual users of federal data continue to analyze the deck chairs on the federal Titanic, unaware of the coming iceberg as federal cuts to staffing, contracting, advisory committees, and funding rip a giant hole in our nation's heretofore unsinkable data apparatus. Many data users took note when the datasets they depend on went dark during the great January 31 purge of data to "defend women," but then went on with their business after most of the data came back in the following weeks. 

    Frankly, most of the American public doesn't care about this data drama. 

    However, like many things in life, we've been taking our data for granted and will miss it terribly when it's gone. 

    As the former U.S. Chief Data Scientist, I know first-hand how valuable and vulnerable our nation's federal data assets are. However, it took one of the deadliest natural disasters in U.S history to expand my perspective from that of just a data user, to a data advocate for life. 

    Read the rest of the article here: The Data We Take for Granted

    Federation of American Scientists remove preview
    The Data We Take for Granted
    As the former U.S. Chief Data Scientist, I know first-hand how valuable and vulnerable our nation's federal data assets are. Like many things in life, we've been taking our data for granted and will miss it terribly when it's gone.
    View this on Federation of American Scientists >



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    Denice Ross
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  • 2.  RE: The Data We Take for Granted: Telling the Story of How Federal Data Benefits American Lives and Livelihoods

    Posted 06-23-2025 02:48 PM

    Here's an example:

    The Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, produced by the National Center for Education Statistics, is the source for College Navigator (https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/), a great resource for students and families seeking information on higher education opportunities. In addition to providing a rich set of unbiased information on colleges (enrollment, degree programs, tuition & fees, and much more) to help students find the institutions that fit their academic, financial, and personal needs, the site also includes links to additional information and resources on college prices and student financial aid.  It is a great example of federal data providing an important public service.



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    Jacqueline King
    AACTE
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  • 3.  RE: The Data We Take for Granted: Telling the Story of How Federal Data Benefits American Lives and Livelihoods

    Posted 06-24-2025 11:57 AM

    We love it! How's this for one?

    A transitioning military servicemember uses IPEDs data through the Department of Education's College Navigator to find a college near their hometown that will give credit for military training and where there's a vibrant student veteran community.



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    Denice Ross
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  • 4.  RE: The Data We Take for Granted: Telling the Story of How Federal Data Benefits American Lives and Livelihoods

    Posted 06-24-2025 03:16 PM

    I'd add one revision - that both IPEDS and the National Student Loan Data System (NSLDS) power the College Scorecard. I know it's a small revision, but there's lots of agreement about the importance of IPEDS and less about the importance of NSLDS. So just throwing that out there.

    Another example is the Great Schools, which people rely on for information about the quality of schools in neighborhoods where they are looking to buy homes, gets its data from the Common Core of Data in large part. 



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    Kate Tromble
    Data Quality Campaign
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  • 5.  RE: The Data We Take for Granted: Telling the Story of How Federal Data Benefits American Lives and Livelihoods

    Posted 06-24-2025 04:09 PM

    Love the idea of including Great Schools.

    Just want to clarify that College Navigator and College Scorecard are distinct resources.  Since the Scorecard was originated during the Obama Administration -- and is likely therefore suspect among Republicans -- I chose to focus on the College Navigator.  Both are useful tools and worthy of mention, and I agree with Kate that spotlighting NSLDS is worthwhile.  

    Hope that is helpful.

    Jaci



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    Jacqueline King
    AACTE
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  • 6.  RE: The Data We Take for Granted: Telling the Story of How Federal Data Benefits American Lives and Livelihoods

    Posted 06-24-2025 04:14 PM

    Ah, good point on College Navigator, Jaci! I read to quickly and assumed Scorecard. 



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    Kate Tromble
    Data Quality Campaign
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  • 7.  RE: The Data We Take for Granted: Telling the Story of How Federal Data Benefits American Lives and Livelihoods

    Posted 06-26-2025 10:58 AM

    Jaci and Kate, Agree about Great Schools being a fantastic conduit! We have a use case that mentions it in EssentialData.US: 

     When relocating to a new city for their work, parents can find an apartment on Zillow near a local school with great disability resources using Zillow's school quality rating tool powered by the Department of Education's Civil Rights Data Collection through GreatSchools.org.

    We are trying to make the use cases in EssentialData.US 1:1 correspond with specific collections, rather than the model or tool that integrates a bunch of datasets. That said, I'd love to include a use case about the benefits of National Student Loan Data System (NSLDS) -- does it have any public-facing data? Who would be a compelling beneficiary for the data?



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    Denice Ross
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