Data has always fascinated recent Middle Tennessee State University graduate Musa Touray, so his interest was piqued when he saw that MTSU started offering data science concentrations a few years ago.
The university then transitioned to data science being offered as a full undergraduate degree program not long after, a perfect fit for Touray — one of the first three graduates from the interdisciplinary program who walked the stage inside Murphy Center just over a month ago.
A West African native and Nashville, resident, Touray was joined by fellow data science graduates and Franklin, Tennessee, residents David Jean and Kevin Smalley. They enter a job market where entry-level salaries average $70,000 to $85,000 for “data scientists” skilled at analyzing and interpreting data.
Led by Ryan Otter, director of the Data Science Institute, and associate professor Lisa Green, director of the data science undergraduate program, the university’s data science program recently received approval to launch a master’s degree program this fall to complement the incorporation of data science into its doctoral program in computational science and its certificate program launched a few years ago.
“The graduation of these three students is a significant milestone for the undergraduate data science program,” Green said. “We are so proud that our graduates are at such a high standard. These students will represent MTSU well.”
“MTSU invested early into data science, and now with the launching of the M.S. degree, we are very excited to offer the full array of academic programs so students and professionals be trained at all levels, from B.S. degrees to graduate certificates to Ph.D.’s in data science,” Otter said.
‘Hot field … lot of opportunity’
Nashville and the Midstate are home to a litany of health care and financial services companies, logistics and similar industries that rely on data. One such industry is logistics behemoth Amazon, which has offered Touray an operational manager’s position that he’s considering along with other offers facilitated through a talent recruitment agency.
Touray likes the interdisciplinary nature of data science in that it encompasses a convergence of computer science, statistics and business.
“For me, it’s all about history. When you go to high school, and they give you a history class, the reason they teach you that is to know where you’re going,” said Touray, whose degree included a business intelligence cognate with a minor in statistics. “Because if you don’t where you’re from you will not know where you’re headed. That’s what data is all about.”
Fellow graduate Jean, who also earned his bachelor’s in data science with a business intelligence cognate, transferred to MTSU from Columbia State Community College as an information systems major. Upon learning of the university’s creation of the full data science major, “it just seemed like a logical step,” he said.
“It’s a hot field with a lot of opportunity, and I felt it was a good time to hop on that boat,” he said, adding that MTSU professors and advisors “really help you get a degree that’s highly customizable and that’s a perfect fit for you. The faculty have been great and really supportive of the program.”
Jean is continuing a paid internship at the Data Science Institute this summer, then will start the university’s new master’s degree in data science in the fall. He said pursuing his master’s will help him determine whether he wants to move into industry or pursue a doctorate.
Touray said he’s been accepted into MTSU’s graduate program in business intelligence and plans to start taking classes this year while he continues to work full time.
Meanwhile, Smalley is also excited about his prospects in the job market. He’s searching for full-time employment, preferring to stay in the Southeast if possible but open “to wherever I can get a cool job.”
Setting a standard
Smalley came to MTSU as a transfer student from the University of Alabama, where he was majoring in electrical engineering.
While that turned out not to be the right major for him, he said he enjoyed his statistics classes and some of his computer science classes. Data science “was a good marriage of both,” he said, adding that he’s drawn to the idea of a data scientist being able to identify trends that could, for example, help a company run its operations more efficiently.
Smalley said undergraduate program director Green has been “super helpful” with course advice, adding that he and his fellow inaugural graduates are “hopefully setting a good standard for incoming freshmen.” He encourages incoming students to discuss their goals with professors about what they hope to gain from the program.
Smalley has been involved with the MTSU Data Science Club as community liaison and has helped coordinate interactions with various industry professionals who shared what they do day to day to give students a better idea of potential career paths they could take within the data science field.
Like his fellow graduates, Smalley said that MTSU professors and instructors seemed to take student feedback seriously in helping fine-tune a new program and allowing for a broader selection of electives for students with varying interests.
Like Smalley, Jean said program director Green “is always going out of her way to make sure students are taking classes that are a good fit for us.”
A founder and president of the Data Science Club, Jean praises Otter’s work through the Data Science Institute that provides students with supplemental activities to engage such as the Amazon Web Services “Deep Racer” event last fall that brought together various teams to see who could program the best autonomously driven model race cars.
“I just want to take what I’ve learned from this to be a role model for future students to show them that it’s tough, but it’s doable,” he said. “I would encourage them to get involved on campus and take full advantage of all the resources MTSU has to offer!”
Growing professional field, program
Touray said the ongoing technological advances are leading to an exponential increase in the amount of data that is being generated and collected across many industries, therefore “you need to people who know how to work with it and analyze it.”
Whether it be in medicine or in tech, data helps businesses understand where they have been in order to make informed decisions and develop strategies about the present and the future, he said.
“For you to be successful in any market, you have to understand who your customers are: What do they want? How did they like your product? You have to be able to analyze those things. Data science is such a growing field because of the need for businesses to better understand who their customers are and how to meet their needs.”
Touray received significant financial assistance through the Tennessee Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation, or TSLAMP, with the help of Mimi Thomas, program director for MTSU. The program provides scholarships and research stipends to qualifying students in its effort to increase the participation of underrepresented students in STEM disciplines and professions.
Touray recalls taking a course taught by Scott Seipel, associate professor of information systems and analytics, and looking at data sets from a financial institution in hopes of understanding the level of customer satisfaction. By using coding to develop predictive models to analyze the data, institutions may be able to identify specific customers more likely to move to another institution.
Smalley said the growing collection of information through internet usage means massive amounts of data is constantly accumulating, “but most businesses simply don’t know what to do with it. … and they just store it.”
From sports analytics to location analytics to data mining to numerous other data-focused jobs, Smalley said the opportunities in the field seem almost endless.
Touray agrees.
“There are a lot of opportunities. Businesses know, that within every organization, data is what really drives them,” he said. “A lot of businesses have this data, but they don’t know what to do with it. So that need people with this skill set.”
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