Welcome to the Statistics department library portal. The portal provides quick links to the resources you need to succeed in your course. Whether you are online or on-Grounds, UVA Library services and support are available to all students.
Your librarian is Erich Purpur.
Each school at UVA is assigned a research librarian. Connect with Erich for help with your assignments. This service is available to all Statistics students, and meeting with a librarian early in your research process can help you save time and get a better grade.
Erich can help with: learning how to use the Library online, brainstorming your research topic, developing your search strategy, capstone/thesis/dissertation planning, identifying relevant databases/journals for your literature reviews, tracking down resources, and citation management. Erich can meet with you in-person or online via Zoom.
Sign up for Library orientations, workshops, and events with our online calendar. UVA Library programming is offered in-person and online.
The UVA Library StatLab provides free consulting and training to UVA students, faculty, and staff. StatLab can help with the following:
To set up an appointment, email us at statlab@virginia.edu. We can work with you in person, over zoom, or via email. Walk-in Hours are available during the fall and spring semesters
Academic databases contain peer-reviewed articles, scientific papers, reports, and more. These are the most used databases for your field of study.
For those of you using the US Census, you might want to check out these resources:
Also see News sources’ GitHub repos: NYTimes, Washington Post, BuzzFeed News, etc.
Every empirical academic paper is going to have a methods section. Look for articles similar to a topic you are interested in, and check the methods section. What data are they using?
Here is a real-life example. A group of students asked Jenn about Major League Baseball injuries, and she found this: Injury Rates in Major League Baseball During the 2020 COVID-19 Season. The very first line of the Methods section states, “Data from the 2018-2020 MLB transaction reports were extracted online at mlb.com/transactions.”
Start in one place and keep iterating. Use the first place to see if sources are cited, and work from there.
Statista is a great place to try this strategy. Statista only offers basic statistics (tables and charts, not full datasets). However, they always cite their sources. Keep digging at the source to see if you can find an original dataset. You can use the same strategy with PolicyMap as well.