Maggie Sullivan (MS-DSPP’24), an international development specialist and emerging data scientist, has already lived and worked in three countries. She is well acquainted with the critical role that data plays in shaping U.S. foreign policy and the real-world impact of those policies on marginalized communities around the world.
As a soon-to-be-graduate of the McCourt School of Public Policy’s Master of Science in Data Science for Public Policy (MS-DSPP) program, Sullivan hopes to bridge the gap between gathering insights from data and making, and communicating, policy decisions that positively impact people’s lives.
While completing her undergraduate studies in international affairs at Western Kentucky University, Sullivan began her work with the U.S. Department of State through the highly competitive U.S. Foreign Service Internship Program, a merit and needs-based opportunity for undergraduates to experience diplomacy first-hand, in Washington, DC, and at a U.S. Embassy or Consulate abroad. She was one of 34 students selected among hundreds of qualified candidates.
As a U.S. Foreign Service intern, Sullivan kickstarted her career in international policy, dedicating seven weeks to refugee admissions in the Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM). There, she found data analytics, a discovery that changed her career trajectory.
“One of my initial tasks was developing a Tableau dashboard for PRM to help the team better understand where refugees were being resettled and thus, how to make more strategic funding decisions,” said Sullivan. “It was data visualization for impact.”
The following year, Sullivan spent 10 weeks working at the U.S. Embassy in Sarajevo, Bosnia, in the Political Section, followed by five months teaching English in Bulgaria. Upon returning home to the U.S., Sullivan began working with the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), including two years as a program analyst supporting an interagency strategy on foreign aid for vulnerable children and families. Before starting at McCourt, she spent six months as a Communications Specialist for USAID in Rabat, Morocco.
At USAID, Sullivan reflected on what she wanted to do next with her career and the skills she needed to acquire to move forward.
“I saw how the government collects data, and I wanted to learn how to better utilize it,” she said. “I didn’t have the quantitative and data analysis skills I would need to be successful, so I turned to the McCourt School without hesitation.”
Using technology in service of the common good
Sullivan had not taken a math class since high school and initially struggled to adjust to the quantitative rigor of the MS-DSPP program. With the support of her professors and the comradery of her fellow MS-DSPP classmates, Sullivan excelled.