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Nature Hu came to Penn’s
School of Social Policy & Practice
(SP2) with a curiosity about how individual stories connect to systemic change. Before joining SP2’s
Master of Science in Social Policy (MSSP) program
, she saw firsthand how data shapes policy, including how compassion and technical skill can work together to drive meaningful impact.
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Nature Hu is MSSP+DA student at Penn’s School of Social Policy & Practice.
(Image: Courtesy of Penn Engineering)
At SP2, she’s refining that balance through evidence-driven coursework, cross-cultural conversations with classmates, and even the steady discipline she’s honed as a snowboarder and long-distance runner.
Hu says she chose SP2 because the School brings together social science, policy thinking, and data tools. “When I worked on the China Family Panel Studies field interviews, I got to see the real lives behind the data,” she explains. “On the other end of the phone were families talking about income pressure, education access, and aging concerns. Those conversations stayed with me. But they also made me question something: how do individual stories like these actually shape policy?
“That experience made me realize that, while qualitative insight is powerful, it has limits. Personal stories matter deeply, but without strong data analysis, they often don’t reach decision-making spaces,” Hu says. “I started asking myself: How do we see patterns in large datasets? How do we move beyond intuition and really test what works?”
The turning point, Hu says, came later when she was working on a local digital management system. “I saw how data can directly influence resource allocation and policy priorities. That was a turning point for me. I understood that if I wanted to be part of meaningful institutional change, I needed both compassion and technical skills.”
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SP2 News
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