Notes |
If data relating to gun violence or made more available, researchers would be better-placed to help policymakers curb harm in this
policy area. Submitted by: American Institutes for Research.
When AIR developed and piloted an easy-to-use, evidence-based promising practices database and dashboard of cross systems
opioid-related interventions (which includes emerging policies and practices from CrimeSolutions.gov, SAMHSA’s National
Registry of Evidence-Based Programs and Practices, and other sources), then communities and states were able to conduct free
text searching of interventions in prevention, treatment, harm reduction, and recovery; and across a variety of geographic areas,
populations (e.g., children), sectors, and implementers. Submitted by: American Institutes for Research.
If Federal statistical agencies implement secure cloud-based analytical platforms that incorporate the latest big data technologies
(e.g., Hadoop and Spark) and cloud computing technologies (Kubernetes native cloud computing architecture), then they will be
able to centralize data lifecycle management, analyze data at an unprecedented scale, improve data security from all angles
(including granular access controls), and manage centrally the tools and code to provide a personalized computing environment.
Submitted by: American Institutes for Research.
If states and institutions update their programs to careers resources (CIPSOC crosswalk tools) with Integrated Postsecondary
Education Data System (IPEDS), College Scorecard, student aid, Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and Census American
Community Survey (ACS) data, on postsecondary graduates (plus workforce training recipients, as available), then like AIR's
LaunchMyCareer tool, they would be able to better analyze students’ choices, postsecondary institution support and resource
provision, employer strategies, cross-sector collaboration, and state resource allocations. Submitted by: American Institutes for
Research. |