Literature Index

Displaying 1211 - 1220 of 3326
  • Author(s):
    Gal, I.
    Editors:
    Rossman, A., & Chance, B.
    Year:
    2006
    Abstract:
    Numerous researchers and educators lament the poor state of statistical literacy and statistical skills in the population. However, few authors base their arguments on actual results from comparative or large-scale studies which provide stable, population-level estimates of performance. This talk will present and discuss selected results regarding statistical skills of adults in multiple countries, based on analysis of two data sources. Secondary analyses of data from the International Adult Literacy Survey (IALS), conducted in 1994-1998 in over 20 countries, were performed with regard to items assessing understanding of bar graphs and pie charts. Implications will be discussed in terms of the need for teaching statistics with a focus on interpretation and communication and on using real-life contexts and tasks in instruction. Conclusions will also be presented regarding the importance of conducting analytic assessments which shed light on multiple types and levels of statistical skills.
  • Author(s):
    Petocz, P. & Reid, A.
    Editors:
    Phillips, B.
    Year:
    2002
    Abstract:
    Students in the same statistics course learn different things, and view the role of the lecturer in different ways. We report on empirical research on students' conceptions of learning statistics, their expectations of teaching, and the relationship between them. The research is based on interviews, analysed using a qualitative methodology, with statistics students studying for a mathematics degree. Students expressed a range of conceptions of learning in statistics and a range of views of their lecturers' teaching. Looking at what students expect of teachers and their views of their own learning provides an opportunity for teachers to develop teaching practices that challenge students to move towards more integrated conceptions of statistics learning.
  • Author(s):
    Garfield, J. B.
    Year:
    1992
    Abstract:
    This paper focuses on the theme of statistical education and includes the following topics: 1. Theories of learning: how we think students learn 2. What we would like students to learn: in terms of statistical ideas, concepts, skills and beliefs 3. Research on teaching and learning statistics 4. Research on teaching and learning mathematics that relates to teaching and learning statistics 5. Implications of research for teaching statistics 6. One example: an alternative statistics course 7. What we still need to find out: a research agenda 8. Current projects
    Location:
  • Author(s):
    Garfield, J. B.
    Year:
    1995
    Abstract:
    Research in the areas of psychology, statistical education, and mathematics education is reviewed and the results applied to the teaching of college-level statistics courses. The argument is made that statistics educators need to determine what it is they really want students to learn, to modify their teaching according to suggestions from the research literature, and to use assessment to determine if their teaching is effective and if students are developing statistical understanding and competence.
  • Author(s):
    Joan Garfield & Dani Ben-Zvi
    Year:
    2007
    Abstract:
    This paper provides an overview of current research on teaching and learning statistics, summarizing studies that have been conducted by researchers from different disciplines and focused on students at all levels. The review is organized by general research questions addressed, and suggests what can be learned from the results of each of these questions. The implications of the research are described in terms of eight principles for learning statistics from Garfield (1995) which are revisited in the light of results from current studies.
  • Author(s):
    Garfield, J., & Ben-Zvi, D. (2007)
    Year:
    2007
    Abstract:
    This paper provides an overview of current research on teaching and learning statistics, summarizing studies that have been conducted by researchers from different disciplines and focused on students at all levels. The review is organized by general research questions addressed, and suggests what can be learned from the results of each of these questions. The implications of the research are describedintermsofeightprinciplesforlearningstatisticsfromGarfield(1995)whicharerevisited in the light of results from current studies.
  • Author(s):
    Cumming, G.
    Editors:
    Rossman, A., & Chance, B.
    Year:
    2006
    Abstract:
    Once upon a time there was only one t distribution, the familiar central t, and it was monopolised by the Null Hypotheses (the Nulls), the high priests in Significance Land. The Alternative Hypotheses (the Alts) felt unjustly neglected, so they developed the noncentral t distribution to break the monopoly, and provide useful functions for researchers-calculation of statistical power, and confidence intervals on the standardised effect size Cohen's d. I present pictures from interactive software to explain how the noncentral t distribution arises in simple sampling, and how and why it differs from familiar, central t. Noncentral t deserves to be more widely appreciated, and such pictures and software should help make it more accessible to teachers and students.
  • Author(s):
    Gigerenzer, G., & Hoffrage, U
    Year:
    1995
  • Author(s):
    Sedlmeier, P
    Year:
    2000
    Abstract:
    Attempts to teach statistical thinking using corrective feedback or a ``rule-training'' approach have been only moderately successful. A new training approach is proposed which relies on the assumption that the human mind is naturally equipped to solve many statistical tasks in which the relevant information is presented in terms of absolute f requencies instead of probabilities. In an investigation of this approach, people were rained to solve tasks involving conjunctive and conditional probabilities using a requency grid to represent probability information. It is suggested that learning by doing, whose mportance was largely neglected in prior training studies, has played a major role in the current training. Study 1 showed that training that combines external pictorial epresentations and learning by doing has a large and lasting effect on how well people an solve conjunctive probability tasks. A ceiling effect prevented comparison of the requency grid and a conventional pictorial representation (Venn diagrams) with respect o effectiveness. However, the grid representation was found to be more effective in Study 2, which dealt with the more difficult topic of conditional probabilities. These results uggest methods to optimize the teaching of statistical thinking and the presentation of statistical information in the media.
  • Author(s):
    Bentz, H., & Borovcnik, M.
    Editors:
    Bell, A., Low, B., & Kilpatrick, J.
    Year:
    1984
    Abstract:
    Variability is a somewhat difficult concept. There is no internal relation in it which gives you insight into the concept of standard deviation at an intuitive level. Some relations that are very important to standard deviation are discussed. They relate standard deviation to mean and other notions at an abstract level. In a broader context of "statistics (mathematics ) as a tool to communicate" they loose their fascination. Maybe we will overcome this problem by techniques of exploratory data analysis and thus cope with the idea of variability more successful in the future.

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