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AAPOR Annual Conference Blog: Friday

05/27/2025

Sometimes, it’s surprisingly easy to find the perfect words to describe a great experience. Other days, when you’re confronted with so many inspiring ideas and engaging conversions with talented people, you need a little time to let it all sink in before you can fully appreciate it and really put pen to paper. And then there’s the secret third option, where being unable to say No to a good BBQ dinner turns into being unable to say No to a beer and a country cover band… and then you have to start your writing a little later than planned.

My last day at AAPOR started early again. Though I didn’t attend the first session this time around (sorry y’all), the time was spent with so many new and familiar faces, simply mingling in the exhibitors hall. And then, when the time came for the next session, I was fully caffeinated and ready for Everyone Counts: Innovations For Leaving No Populations Behind, moderated by University of Michigan’s Brady West. First, Larry Danforth of Jefferson Community College took us back to a time of good ol’ pen and paper, demonstrating some eye-opening best practice take-aways when sampling and interviewing various hard to reach populations: sometimes you need to think about incentivizing your interviewers rather than your respondents. Nielsen’s Ryan Baer addressed the ever salient issue of dwindling response rates and made a compelling case for targeted reselects, using evidence from his research into audience media consumption. Vince Welch from NORC addresses the response rate issues in his vital research on veteran suicide prevention with a quasi experiment with variable monetary incentives, asking the question: what is the bigger motivator – the amount of incentive or the change itself? Beyond that, his work underscored the importance of qualitative work ahead of survey research to fully understand the salient issues of a population. Then, with the very clever use of a reoccurring graph in her presentation, Sunghee Lee from the University of Michigan thoroughly convinced me of the merits of adaptive response driven sampling for reaching elusive or stigmatized populations. The last presentation was a joint effort by Carsten Baumann from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment and Thomas Brassell from ICF, which not only examined the impact of survey awareness initiatives on response rates from their ongoing research, but doubled as a convincing advertisement for the beautiful mountain state, with many slides decorated with scenic views in Colorado.

Time really flew by in this session. Speaking of incentivizing hard to reach populations, Brady coaxed even the most hesitant of student audience members (read: me) into asking their question during the Q&A with a cute ISR Population Studies Center themed pouch.

After a short dip to the aquarium where I marvelled at the arrowfish, got a T-shirt, and completely missed an entire tornado, I reconvened with colleagues to attend the business meeting and closing session for the first time, where we welcomed Jordon Peugh not only as the new AAPOR President but the third female president in a row!

And, just like that, AAPOR was over again.

They say you never forget your first AAPOR, and I agree to some extent, but there’s something uniquely meaningful about returning with a little more perspective and experience, even if it’s just one year’s worth. I’ve rarely had the privilege of being surrounded by so many inspiring and genuinely kind people, and I think I was able to appreciate that even more this time around.

At the risk of sounding kitschy, it feels like every presentation, every hallway conversation, every picture I took of a poster left me with something—a small stone, a shard of glass. Last year, I was content to simply marvel at the different colors and shapes in the palms of my hands.

This year, I begin to carefully pick up those pieces and to arrange them into a pattern that feels natural to me, and that’s something incredibly special and perhaps unique to the context of research. I hope this feeling resonates with others.

Thank you all so much for this experience. My gratitude goes out especially to Jackie Weisman and Ryan Green for once again giving me the privilege of sharing my impressions as a student AAPORite.