Hilda News - 2015

1 July 2015


We are running a course on Statistical Graphics in July.

Statistical Graphics – 21 July 2015

Course Information

What are statistical graphics, and how do they differ from presentation graphics and ‘infovis’ (information visualisation)? What constitutes a good or bad graph and what is the process for graph construction? How can I create a graph that looks like this?

The aim of the course is to provide an introduction to methods for effective visualisation of quantitative data for scientific research purposes, and to illustrate the methods using a mixture of show-and-tell and hands-on exercises by course participants.

The software used is Stata. (Course participants need a basic knowledge of Stata.)

Course instructor

The course will be presented by Professor Stephen Jenkins (London School of Economics).

Stephen Jenkins is an applied economist with substantial experience in the analysis of quantitative data. (For more information about his research and software, see http://ideas.repec.org/e/pje7.html.) Graphs form an integral part of his analytical portfolio.

Location: University of Melbourne (Lab G16, Building 250, 233 Bouverie Street, Carlton)
Date:

Tuesday 21 July 2015

Time: 9.30am – 4.30pm (registration from 9.00am)
Program Download Program
Catering: Lunch, morning and afternoon tea will be provided
Fees: $275 ($175 PhD and Masters students) including GST

To register, go to HILDA training.

9 March 2015

Due to the strong interest in our introductory HILDA training at the end of February, we have decided to rerun this course on 3-5 June. Details are below.

Getting started: Analysing HILDA with Stata - 3–5 June 2015

A hands-on introductory HILDA Survey training course will be held on 3–5 June 2015 at the University of Melbourne.

Course information

This 3-day training course is designed for people who are interested in using the HILDA Survey data but have not yet done so. It will take a descriptive research problem such as "What happens to single mothers who receive Parenting Payment Single? Do they stay on the program from one year to the next? Do they move to another income support program? Do they leave income support?" and go through all the steps necessary to answer this question.

We begin with the HILDA DVD and assume participants have relatively little experience in working with large data sets.

The training will then cover the following topics:

There will be scope within the course to deal with individual questions which participants might have about data extraction and structure in panel data contexts.

Course instructors

The course will be presented by Professor Robert Breunig and Ms Nicole Watson.

Professor Robert Breunig is a member of the Crawford School of Public Policy at the Australian National University. His primary applied research interests are in analysing individual and firm behaviour, evaluating government tax and transfer programs and analysing large data sets.

Nicole Watson is part of the HILDA Survey team at the Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research at the University of Melbourne. She has worked on the HILDA project since 2000 and has been involved in the sample design, weighting, imputation and overall survey management.

Pre-requisites

You do not need to have used the HILDA data or Stata before. You should have some experience with a statistical software package of some sort (eg. SAS, SPSS, Stata). If you have not used Stata before, please consider attending the free short Introduction to Stata course on Tuesday 2 June, 2.00pm - 5.00pm.

While the course will be taught in Stata, SAS equivalent code will be provided.

Course details

Location: 198 Berkeley Street, University of Melbourne (lab to be advised)
Date: Wednesday 3 June to Friday 5 June 2015
For participants who have little or no experience with Stata, there is a free short introduction to Stata, held Tuesday 2 June, 2.00pm – 5.00pm
Time: 9.15am – 4.00pm
Catering: Lunch, morning and afternoon tea will be provided
Fees: $850 ($580 PhD and Masters students)

Registration

To register, go to www.melbourneinstitute.com/hilda/training

You may register your interest in the course with hilda-inquiries prior to 26 May. Payment must be made within 5 working days of being placed on our tentative list to secure your place.

Cancellations within 5 working days prior to the start of the training will not be refunded.

12 February 2015

The Next HILDA Survey Research Conference

Many HILDA Survey data users have been asking about the date of the next HILDA Survey Research Conference, which in the past has been held every second year, with the most recent held in October 2013.

We can now confirm that a conference will not be held in 2015.

Instead, the HILDA Survey Research Conference, along with the LSAC/LSIC Conference, will be merged into a larger national longitudinal data conference, proposed for 2016 and supported by the Department of Social Services (DSS).

The DSS has recently established a National Centre for Longitudinal Data and sees significant strategic value in a joined-up forum for research and discussion, including contemporary data linkage practice across longitudinal, administrative and census data. Its aims will include developing a coordinated framework for longitudinal studies in Australia and to highlight new ways that the data can be used to formulate and evaluate social policy.

This conference will bring together business and not-for-profit organisations in addition to governments and academia, and will be held every two years.

Once we have further details about this conference (and especially the date) we will let all HILDA Survey data users know.

For further information about the National Centre for Longitudinal Data, please email [email protected]

9 February 2015

Reminder for anyone wishing to register for the below training - we have a couple of spots available should you be interested in attending.

Getting started: Analysing HILDA with Stata - February 2015

A hands-on introductory HILDA Survey training course will be held on 25-27 February 2015 at the University of Melbourne.

This 3-day training course is designed for people who are interested in using the HILDA Survey data but have not yet done so. It will take a descriptive research problem such as “What happens to single mothers who receive Parenting Payment Single? Do they stay on the program from one year to the next? Do they move to another income support program? Do they leave income support?” and go through all the steps necessary to answer this question. We begin with the HILDA DVD and assume participants have relatively little experience in working with large data sets.

The training will then cover the following topics:

There will be scope within the course to deal with individual questions which participants might have about data extraction and structure in panel data contexts.

The course will be presented by Prof Robert Breunig (Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University) and Nicole Watson (Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, University of Melbourne).

Location

University of Melbourne

Date

Wednesday 25 February to Friday 27 February 2015

Time

9.15am – 4.00pm

Catering

Lunch, morning and afternoon tea will be provided

Fee

$850 ($580 PhD and Masters students)

To register, go to www.melbourneinstitute.com/hilda/training