Difference between revisions of "National student paper competition"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Erin.pierce2 (talk | contribs) |
|||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | The National Student Paper Competition has entered its Sixth Year. The following are the five papers are the top five submissions in alphabetical order. | + | The National Student Paper Competition has entered its Sixth Year. The following are the five papers are the top five submissions in alphabetical order. |
* An Epidemic of Incompetence: Data Science and the Social Sciences | * An Epidemic of Incompetence: Data Science and the Social Sciences | ||
− | |||
* Data Trusts: A Potential Action of Nation-to-Nation Building | * Data Trusts: A Potential Action of Nation-to-Nation Building | ||
*Giving Voice to the People: Use of Citizen Juries in Shaping Governance of Digital Health in Canada | *Giving Voice to the People: Use of Citizen Juries in Shaping Governance of Digital Health in Canada |
Latest revision as of 10:40, 10 April 2019
The National Student Paper Competition has entered its Sixth Year. The following are the five papers are the top five submissions in alphabetical order.
- An Epidemic of Incompetence: Data Science and the Social Sciences
- Data Trusts: A Potential Action of Nation-to-Nation Building
- Giving Voice to the People: Use of Citizen Juries in Shaping Governance of Digital Health in Canada
- Modernizing Social Science Training: Data Science and the Social Sciences
- Reconciling the Indigenous Doctor Shortage Gap: Social Change through a Collaborative Community Empowered Network
The following are the remainder of the top ten submissions that the competition received.
- An Algorithm Previous Wrote This Essay: Lessons for Public Consultations from Artificial Intelligence
- Cannabis: A Plant with a Potential Worth Investigating
- Creating a Comprehensive Platform for Food Banks to Address Poverty-Oriented Data
- Five Eyes, 5G: Huawei and Telecoms Cybersecurity Procedures in Canada
- Meconium Testing to Detect Prenatal Alcohol Exposure: More Harm Than Good?
We thank everyone who participated, and look forward to next years submissions.