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Andrew Heiss's blog

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ArtCross StitchPandemic BoredomTed LassoCiencias PolíticasInglés
Publicado

Downloads Jump to the downloads and get your own free pattern and template files! Apparently I now only produce cross stitch content. Thanks, pandemic. In preparation for season 2 of the incredible Ted Lasso , I made a cross stitch version of the AFC Richmond crest, and I’m really happy with how it turned out!

ArtCross StitchPandemic BoredomBayesCiencias PolíticasInglés
Publicado

Downloads Jump to the downloads and get your own free pattern! For my latest pandemic art medium (on this, the three hundred and nineteenth day of sheltering in place), I decided to teach myself how to cross stitch. I did a ton of needlepoint as a kid and teen, but was always afraid of cross stitch because it was so much smaller and more delicate.

RTidyverseCausal InferenceDAGsDo CalculusCiencias PolíticasInglés
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Since my last two blog posts on binary and continuous inverse probability weights (IPWs) and marginal structural models (MSMs) for time-series cross-sectional (TSCS) panel data, I’ve spent a ton of time trying to figure out why I couldn’t recover the exact causal effect I had built in to those examples when using panel data. It was a mystery, and it took weeks to figure out what was happening.

RTidyverseCausal InferenceDAGsDo CalculusCiencias PolíticasInglés
Publicado

In my post on generating inverse probability weights for both binary and continuous treatments, I mentioned that I’d eventually need to figure out how to deal with more complex data structures and causal models where treatments, outcomes, and confounders vary over time.

RTidyverseCausal InferenceDAGsDo CalculusCiencias PolíticasInglés
Publicado

My program evaluation class is basically a fun wrapper around topics in causal inference and econometrics. I’m a big fan of Judea Pearl-style “causal revolution” causal graphs (or DAGs), and they’ve made it easier for both me and my students to understand econometric approaches like diff-in-diff, regression discontinuity, and instrumental variables.

TeachingCOVID-19Ciencias PolíticasInglés
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This is written for instructors in the Department of Public Management and Policy at the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University, but it’s hopefully widely applicable too. With more than 100 universities moving their teaching online (including Emory just last night), it’s looking more and more inevitable that GSU will make a similar switch any time now.

Ciencias PolíticasInglés
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(See this notebook on GitHub) I’ve been teaching program evaluation in the MPA/MPP program at GSU for the past semester and a half, and since I was given free rein over how to teach it, I decided to make it as modern and cutting edge as possible.

Ciencias PolíticasInglés
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See this notebook on GitHub. You can (and should) download the project from there if you want to follow along and try this out. tl;dr: Skip to the completed example. I use blogdown to generate the websites for all the courses I teach, and it’s delightful to not have to worry about databases and server configurations.

R MarkdownShinyRGoogle SheetsCiencias PolíticasInglés
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Now that I’m on the tenure track, I’ve been looking for a way to keep track of my different research projects so I can get them all finished and published. Matt Lebo’s “Managing Your Research Pipeline” presents a neat way of quantifying and tracking the progress of your research, and I recently adopted it for my own stuff. I even made a fancy R Markdown + flexdashboard dashboard to show the status of the pipeline interactively.

PandocMacosCiencias PolíticasInglés
Publicado

GSU uses Microsoft’s Office365 for e-mail, which is fine. My previous institutions—Duke and BYU—both use it too, and it’s pretty standard. GSU also enforces 2-factor authentication (2FA) with Duo, which is also fine. Everybody should use some sort of 2FA for all their important accounts! However, for whatever reason, GSU’s version of Duo’s 2FA doesn’t allow you to generate app-specific passwords for things like e-mail.