
Current Students and Affiliates
Looking to get involved with our projects, or want to suggest a research project of your own? Please contact Dr. Jason Ware at jaware@purude.edu to see how you can work with the generator.
Current Course Offerings
- HONR 12000: Intro to Research (summer)
- HONR 46100: Well-Being (service-learning/fall)
- HONR 49500: TREKS City Data (fall and spring)
- HONR 49500: TREKS LEGO (fall and spring)
- HONR 49500: TREKS Students in Action (SIA) (fall and spring)
- HONR 49500: TREKS Sound Archive (fall and spring)
- HONR 49500: TREKS Smart House (fall and spring)
Ongoing Research
This project is focused on creating and maintaining an affordable housing profile and or map for each neighborhood in the northend of Lafayette using various secondary data such as the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) database, Census, Census Tract, and the Polk Directory. The profile and maps include: 1) types of housing 2) mean and median cost of housing per type 3) demographics of people per housing type 4) variations in spending habits per housing type 5) assets and liabilities of each type of housing.
This project is focused on creating livability studies for northend neighborhoods in Lafayette Indiana. The livability studies include: 1) demographic information for each neighborhood — creating a neighborhood profile, 2) mapped neighborhood assets, 3) community context, 4) livability assessment that focuses on a) housing, b) transportation, and c) access to and availability of opportunities to engage in health and wellness, economic, and social activities. Both qualitative and quantitative primary and secondary data will need to be collected from observable neighborhood data, phone interviews, and databases such as the Polk directory, Census, Census Tract, etc.
This project is focused on Lafayette residents who have gone through the Habitat for Humanity house building process. This project involves interviewing homeowners, inquiring about the extent to which going through the house building process has influenced their a) purpose well-being, b) social well-being (pre and post), c) community well-being (pre and post), d) physical and mental well-being, and e) financial well-being. This project could be done in conjunction with the Faith Community Development Impact Project.
This project is focused on qualitatively measuring the extent to which the Faith Community Development Corporation (FCDC), in conjunction with the Hartford Hub, has impacted the Lincoln neighborhood. It involves interviewing residents in the neighborhood about the ways in which the FCDC has enhanced the livability of the neighborhood, and potentially subjective life-ability. This project could be done in conjunction with the Habitat for Humanity Well-Being Project.
This project is focused on collecting primary data on the northend Lafayette neighborhood residences including: 1) structure conditions, 2) property conditions, 3) dwelling and site conditions, 4) other site characteristics, 5) adjacent properties, and 6) public right-of-way conditions. This project requires going to and walking around Lafayette neighborhoods to collect the data.
This project is focused on homelessness in the Greater Lafayette area. More specifically, this project is focused on creating a homelessness profile for the City of Lafayette and comparing it to other communities in Indiana as well as to state-level homelessness data. This project will require collaborating with the State of Indiana.
This project is focused on evictions in Lafayette. More specifically this project will determine where evictions are happening in Lafayette since Governor Eric Holcomb's state moratorium on evictions expired in August 2020. Although the Centers for Disease Control extended the moratorium through the end of the year 2020, Central Indiana expected a surge of evictions related to COVID-19. This project will use local evictions data to determine where evictions are happening in Lafayette.
This project is exploratory in nature and is designed to address stability, the 'single largest problem' the City of Lafayette faces—other than keeping people housed during COVID-19. This project is focused on addressing the question, 'how can the City of Lafayette attract people to the northend and make it a place where people want to live and stay, and to reinvest in their respective neighborhoods?'
This project is focused on measuring the impact that Food Finders Food Bank has on the communities it serves. Specifically, it involves evaluating Food Finders’ Resource and Education Center, and the services it provides. This is a primarily quantitative study conducted via surveys.
This project is a direct response to the City of Lafayette’s expressed need—within the Good Decisions, Good Data project—for a, “…legacy system that will facilitate future data gathering and analysis.” This is an ongoing project focused on automating a neighborhood, housing, and homelessness data extraction, analysis, and visualization process that will continually provide the City of Lafayette with data to inform and guide their efforts in neighborhood revitalization, affordable housing, and homelessness intervention.
This project is in partnership with the Habitat for Humanity Lafayette affiliate. The goal is to build a student-led John Martinson Honors College Smart Build every other year. In addition to getting students directly involved in providing affordable housing to local residents, this project will use smart homes as launching pads to engage neighbors in respective neighborhoods in working together to enhance the overall livability of their neighborhoods and to increase community well-being via neighborhood revitalization. This project will involve students in every phase of the Habitat for Humanity build process including fundraising, floor plan design, landscape design and implementation, incorporating smart technologies, doing comparative studies of varying building materials such as siding, educating partner-families, and telling partner-family success stories.
This project is focused on launching FIRST LEGO League teams within informal learning spaces, such as after-school programs hosted by community and neighborhood centers, to engage underrepresented minority youth in STEM activities. FIRST LEGO League programs focus on STEM through engaging youth in research, problem-solving, and building and programming LEGO robots. There is a research component to the initiative which involves measuring the extent to which youth's engagement in this type of informal educational programming enhances their problem solving, research thinking, collaboration, and innovation skills.
“Students In Action (SIA) is a unique youth service, leadership and recognition program that supports, trains and empowers today's youth to be leaders, problem solvers, entrepreneurs and impactful global citizens.” This project is focused on mentoring local youth via the Students in Action (SIA) program hosted by Multiplying Good. Researchers involved in this project will serve at one of six local middle or high schools as an SIA coach, and will mentor youth as they identify important local challenges and issues. SIA coaches will mentor and support youth as they design, develop, implement, and measure the impact of programs to address the challenges and issues they identified. The research component of this project will be an ethnography-like exploration of how local youth identify and address issues that are important to them, and exploring the extent to such community engagement influences local youth’s propensity to serve.
This project builds upon the work of the Current State of Evictions Project and is focused on investigating correlations that exist between homelessness, health, and healthcare access. Dr. Ware, two of his colleagues from Purdue University's College of Health and Human Sciences, and Family Promise of Greater Lafayette (the city's only organization serving homeless families), have obtained a grant to investigate the various stressors caused by homelessness that translate to adverse health outcomes.