Assistant Teaching Professor of Sociology
Statewide Spatial Equity Analyst and Coordinator
Program Coordinator
CSDE End of the Year Reception
Join us for light refreshments and ’shout outs’, as we celebrate CSDE’s accomplished trainees! We’ll be awarding Demographic Methods Certificates, as well as congratulating soon-to-graduate trainees, trainees headed off for exciting summer activities, and other accomplishments. We’ll be sharing these accomplishments in-person in Room 101 of the Hans Rosling Center, but you may also join for the formal program online.
Room 101 is a large space where we will have the doors and windows wide open and there will be plenty of ventilation for our in-person attendees, along with recommended masks, affording safe interactions and good community building!
Martinson, Lapham, Ercin-Swearinger, and Co-Authors Publish New Research on Millennial and Gen X Heart Health
Last week, The Journals of Gerontology published a special issue: “Why Does Health in the US Continue to Lag Behind?” CSDE Affiliate Melissa Martinson, CSDE Trainees Jessica Lapham and Hazal Ercin-Swearinger, and co-authors Julien Teitler and Nancy Reichman contributed an article titled “Generational Shifts in Young Adult Cardiovascular Health? Millennials and Generation X in the United States and England.” The study finds that while Millennials generally fared worse than their Gen X counterparts in terms of obesity and diabetes risk, especially in the United States, they had lower rates of smoking and high cholesterol in both countries.
UW Today Highlights Almquist and Colleagues’ Research on Social Cohesion and COVID Transmission
On May 23, UW Today highlighted CSDE Training Core PI & Executive Committee Member Zack Almquist and his colleagues for their continued work on heterogeneity of COVID transmission across communities. This like of Almquist’s work began with this 2020 article on spatial heterogeneity in infection timing and severity, highlighted in the CSDE newsletter here. More recently, Almquist and his co-authors published the article on the distribution of social cohesion across space, also featured in our newsletter.
CSDE and Population Health Initiative Announces Summer 2022 Applied Research Fellows
CSDE and the Population Health Initiative announced the selection of four graduate students and one undergraduate student as members of the 2022 cohort of the Applied Research Fellowship. Launched in 2019, the Applied Research Fellowship is a joint effort between PHI and CSDE. The program’s goal is to offer students data analysis, critical thinking and team science skills that will help them solve complex population health challenges on their way to becoming future leaders in the field.
This year’s team will be working King County’s Demographer and be directed by Dr. Jessica Godwin CSDE Research Scientist. The team will be developing data and tools for employing the county’s assessor data to inform models of housing capacity. The cohort of students selected for this year’s fellowship program are Oliver Tjalve (Sociology and Statistics), Chris Govella (Real Estate), Jenna Castillo (Sociology), Maxine Wright (Sociology), and Mary Jewell (Epidemiology).
These students will spend 10 weeks over the summer working collaboratively with King County’s demographer and Public Health – Seattle & King County’s Assessment, Policy Development and Evaluation Unit with the support of the Population Health Applied Research Fellowships. They will estimate trends in household size and household characteristics across the county to build on the efforts of the 2021 cohort of applied research fellows.
This work is particularly relevant for policymakers and future resource allocators, as it helps them understand indicator trends across time and space, and how these trends vary across age, race and space. The dramatic changes in size, geographic distribution and demographic makeup of King County also contribute to the significance of this work.
The opportunity for students to work on a real-world, client-driven project as part of a multidisciplinary team will benefit their understanding how to integrate their disciplinary expertise into a team-oriented, problem-solving approach that develops interdisciplinary solutions to population health challenges.
Learn more about this fellowship program by visiting its web page.
WWU’s Demographic Research Lab Renamed in Honor of Lucky Tedrow
CSDE’s northern, neighboring undergraduate demographic training program at Western Washington University has renamed its lab to the Tedrow Lab for Demographic and Social Research. The Center for Social Science Instruction/Demographic Research Laboratory was directed by Lucky Tedrow between 1977 – 2018. Under Tedrow’s leadership, the lab was responsible for launching the careers of many demographic scholars with important contributions to the field. CSDE Affiliate Matt Hall (Cornell) and former PAA President Doug Massey are among the famous alums. Upon Tedrow’s retirement, the Department voted to rename the lab in honor of his important contributions to the Department of Sociology at WWU. Director Tedrow mentored hundreds of students in population data analysis, statistical computing, and demographic research. He was the Principal Investigator on multiple grants funded by the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health. His research on fertility, the military, divorce and family change, and demographic forecasting was published as dozens of journal articles, book chapters, and a co-authored book. Director Tedrow established the largest endowed scholarship in the history of the Sociology Department. This scholarship provides funding each year for demography students, creating a legacy that supports future generations of demographers. In 2022, this scholarship was renamed as the “Lucky Tedrow Demography Scholarship” to celebrate Director Tedrow’s accomplishments.
Douglas Massey writes fondly about the announcement: “I am thrilled to learn that the scholarship fund of the Demographic Research Laboratory has been named for the DRL’s founding director and longtime steward of its scholarship fund, Lucky Tedrow. During his four decades at the helm of the DRL, Lucky did so much to introduce the field of demography to generations of students. He not only instructed and mentored countless Western students in the rigorous compilation and analysis of demographic data, but through his many successful grant applications to the National Science Foundation’s Program on Research Experiences for Undergraduates, he organized and led a succession of Summer Workshops that provided training and hands-on research experience to dozens of trainees from colleges and universities through the nation. As a result of his many years of dedication and leadership at the DRL, Lucky helped to launch many of us into productive careers doing demographic research for employers in business, government, nonprofits, and academia. We all owe him a great debt of gratitude.”
Glass’s Work on Science Communication Podcast Highlighted by Anthropology Department
The Anthropology Department recently highlighted the work of CSDE Trainee Delaney Glass in their news updates. Glass is featured for her role producing the Human Biology Association’s Sausage of Science (SoS) Podcast, dedicated to disseminating anthropological science to broader audiences. The feature quotes Glass emphasizing the importance of sharing knowledge about the discipline, particularly with respect to “the theory-driven perspectives we take and the way we do community-engaged work. The focus in our discipline is centered around embracing and understanding contextual and temporal drivers of human variability.”