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Audacious Changemaker: Data (S)mart 听

Aarushi Sahejpal, CAS/BS 鈥22, SIS/BA 鈥22, CAS/MS 鈥23听

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Jeff Watts

Aarushi Sahejpal

Aarushi Sahejpal has found purpose in what once paralyzed him.

The child of Indian engineers who immigrated to San Jose in 1997, he found math a frustrating jumble of numbers. 鈥淚 nearly failed every math class growing up. I was told I couldn鈥檛 do it, so I believed I couldn鈥檛 do it.鈥

And then, suddenly, he did it. After creating his first spreadsheet in 2018 as an intern with Education Week, something clicked. 鈥淢y manager said, 鈥榊ou just built a dataset.鈥 I was like, 鈥楴o way, this is fascinating.鈥欌

In August, Sahejpal, 23, will become one of the youngest professors in 麻豆原创 history, joining the School of Communication鈥攚here he鈥檚 worked as an adjunct since 2022鈥攁s a professorial lecturer in quantitative methods and data journalism. He will hold a dual appointment as data editor at the Investigative Reporting Workshop鈥攁 position he鈥檚 held since last year.

It only took a few years for Sahejpal to overcome his fear of numbers and literally write the book on it. (So, You Are Bad at Math . . . is forthcoming.) The secret to his exponential success? 鈥淎 work ethic no one could deny,鈥 he says.听

Sahejpal鈥攐ne of the first Eagles to major in data science, a program that now boasts dozens of students鈥攖aught himself to code while working the overnight shift at the front desk of Anderson Hall. After the pandemic hit and his 8 a.m. classes became 5 a.m. classes on the West Coast, Sahejpal volunteered with the Atlantic鈥檚 COVID Tracking Project to fill the long days. Within weeks, he was offered a full-time job building the first dataset in the country to track the spread of COVID in long-term care facilities.听

鈥淚 realized that you can change the world with numbers. You can help answer some of the most profound questions and shed light on the most marginalized communities,鈥 Sahejpal says.听

Two years later, when he started working at SOC while pursuing his master鈥檚 in data science, Sahejpal imparted that same lesson to his students.听

鈥淭he tools they learn in my class will help them tell the stories of tomorrow. Data is powerful, but no one is built to be a numbers person. You have to want it,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檝e spent my entire life trying to be seen. I found myself at 麻豆原创, I fell in love with numbers here. I can鈥檛 think of a greater honor than helping my students do the same.鈥澨