![]() |
||||||||||
ABOUT UWM I S P R |
||||||||||
|
The Institute for Survey & Policy Research (ISPR) was established in 1968 as the Social Science Research Facility to provide research support services to faculty and students at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. As the UW-Milwaukee Institute for Survey and Policy Research, the former SSRF has, over time, evolved into a multidisciplinary research organization. ISPR is currently a major research resource for the UW-Milwaukee community, the Greater Milwaukee area, and the state of Wisconsin. ISPR is involved in several academic/research activities. While its scope has been expanded, the institute remains committed to social science research and education at UW-Milwaukee, playing a major role as an educational technology leader in the campus community. The following is a summary of the activities of ISPR: Survey Research Services:
The Wisconsin Poll: A quarterly survey of adults in Wisconsin on a variety of political, social, economic, and public policy issues. Microcomputing Courses: Short courses on the use of microcomputers in the Social Sciences. Economic Impact Studies: Impact studies using Input-Outpul modeling techniques. |
|
Economic Forecasts: Using econometric modeling techniques, ISPR provides quarterly forecasts of the Wisconsin economy by sectors. Monitoring Wisconsin: A quarterly newsletter published by ISPR. Survey Research Lab: The Institute for Survey and Policy Research maintains a modern, state-of-the-art, computer assisted telephone interviewing (CATI) lab. As the director of UWM Institute for Survey & Policy Research, Dr.
Arora has guided the transformation of the former SSRF from a punch-card
data processing center to a respectable research institution with the
latest in computing technology and a state of the art survey facility (a
multi-workstation Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing - CATI - lab).
An econometrician and professor of Economics, Dr. Arora is extensively
involved in the development of social science research and teaching at the
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. For more information please contact:
|
||||||||
For information regarding this site please send email to ispr@uwm.edu |