Amy Luginbuhl Phelps, PhD 1 DSI 2013 Baltimore.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
PROFESSIONAL REFLECTIVE JOURNALS AND TIME LOGS Tools for an Effective Field Placement.
Advertisements

1 Developing Tests for Departmental Assessment Deborah Moore, Assessment Specialist Institutional Research, Planning, & Effectiveness University of Kentucky.
(With Apologies to Dr. Strangelove).  It is a course designed for graduate students in business who have not taken any statistics courses as undergraduates.
Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education (GAISE) Kari Lock Morgan STA 790: Teaching Statistics 9/19/12.
Courtney Anstett, M.S. Service-Learning Coordinator Norwalk Community College Bringing Service and Learning Together.
Statistics Using StatCrunch in a Large Enrollment Course Roger Woodard Department of Statistics NC State University.
Developing a Statistics Teaching and Beliefs Survey Jiyoon Park Audbjorg Bjornsdottir Department of Educational Psychology The National Statistics Teaching.
Faculty Views of Statistics in Teaching and Research Laura Taylor and Kirsten Doehler Assistant Professors of Statistics 1.
Copyright ©2011 Brooks/Cole, Cengage Learning Testing Hypotheses about Means Chapter 13.
Lab Modules For a 1 st or 2 nd Statistics Course Shonda Kuiper
Copyright © 2005 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. 1.1 Chapter One What is Statistics?
Midterm Review Evaluation & Research Concepts Proposals & Research Design Measurement Sampling Survey methods.
Statistics for Decision Making Descriptive Statistics QM Fall 2003 Instructor: John Seydel, Ph.D.
Applied Business Forecasting and Regression Analysis Introduction.
The research process Psych 231: Research Methods in Psychology.
Data Analysis Statistics. Levels of Measurement Nominal – Categorical; no implied rankings among the categories. Also includes written observations and.
ACC802: Applied Research Prof Dr Normah Omar
Blended Courses: How to have the best of both worlds in higher education By Susan C. Slowey.
EVIDENCE BASED WRITING LEARN HOW TO WRITE A DETAILED RESPONSE TO A CONSTRUCTIVE RESPONSE QUESTION!! 5 th Grade ReadingMs. Nelson EDU 643Instructional.
Interactive Science Notebooks: Putting the Next Generation Practices into Action
An On-line Statistics Course in a Bioethics Curriculum Jane E. Oppenlander, Ph.D. Assistant Professor The Bioethics Program Union Graduate College-Mt.
Following changes in a two-semester Business Statistics Sequence at Duquesne University Amy L. Phelps, Speaking About Teaching Business.
Principles of Assessment
Trying to Give Business Students What They Need for Their Future Bob Andrews Virginia Commonwealth University.
Gina Reed Gainesville State College. ASA/MAA Recommendations Emphasize the elements of statistical thinking Incorporate more data and concepts Foster.
Welcome... Simon Walls PhD Marketing School of Business Administration.
Literature Review and Parts of Proposal
Crosswalk Data Analysis Lynn White’s Stats Class Spring 2011 Add the names of all the team members to this first slide.
RESPONDENT BACKGROUND DISTRIBUTION Data from 31 survey respondents Student Assessment of Their Learning Gains from Conducting Collaborative Research Projects.
Service-Learning and Grant Writing Workshop Tennessee Technological University February 23, 2010 Presented by: Shelley Brown Department of Sociology and.
AN ASSESSMENT SYSTEM FOR EVALUATING STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES IN COOPERATIVE EDUCATION James E. Colbert, Jr., Ph.D. Lander University Greenwood, SC.
Integrating Interdisciplinary Research into a First Statistics Course Shonda Kuiper
● Final exam Wednesday, 6/10, 11:30-2:30. ● Bring your own blue books ● Closed book. Calculators and 2-page cheat sheet allowed. No cell phone/computer.
Teaching Statistics Online CAUSEweb Webinar December 12, 2006 Michelle Everson University of Minnesota.
Copyright © 2010, 2007, 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Eleventh Edition and the Triola.
The Marketing Research Project. Purposes of the Project 1.Give you practical experience at conducting a marketing research project. 2.Examine some factors.
Slide Slide 1 Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley. Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Tenth Edition and the.
Department of Computing and Technology School of Science and Technology Bachelor of Science Technology CIP Code Program Quality Improvement Report.
Workshop on Teaching Introductory Statistics Session 1: Planning A Conceptual Course Using Common Threads And Big Ideas, Part I: GAISE Recommendations.
EDU 385 CLASSROOM ASSESSMENT Week 1 Introduction and Syllabus.
Validating an Interactive Approach to Teach Large Statistics Classes Based on the GAISE Recommendations Ramon Gomez Senior Instructor Dept. of Math & Statistics.
1 STAT 500 – Statistics for Managers STAT 500 Statistics for Managers.
Researcher’s Name School City, State.  Explain the background concepts that your audience needs to understand your research.  Describe why you chose.
Credits: 3 Respond critically to significant aspects of visual and/or oral text(s) through close reading, supported by evidence English 3.9 Through their.
INF 117 Project in Software Engineering Lecture Notes -Winter Quarter, 2008 Michele Rousseau Set 1.
BUS 362 Marketing Research SPSS Exam Spring 2014 Name: Emilija Naumoska Time of the exam start: digit/letter code:
Science Science is  The process of trying to understand the world  A way of knowing, thinking and learning  Based on observation and experimentation.
Problem Solving. o You notice something, and wonder why it happens. o You see something and wonder what causes it. o You want to know how or why something.
Introduction to Statistics I MATH 1131, Summer I 2008, Department of Math. & Stat., York University.
The research process Psych 231: Research Methods in Psychology.
NIH and IRB Purpose and Method M.Ed Session 2.
Authentic Discovery Projects in Statistics GCTM Conference October 16, 2009 Dianna Spence NGCSU Math/CS Dept, Dahlonega, GA.
Penn State University, School of Business Administration 1/21/20161 MRKT 472-MARKETING RESEARCH Dr. Ugur Yucelt School of Business Administration Spring.
Subject to change. Advanced Placement Psychology Course Goal  To learn about the field of psychology through in- depth study, discussion and hands-on.
Developing Program Learning Outcomes To help in the quality of services.
Research Methods in Psychology Introduction to Psychology.
Practice As part of a program to reducing smoking, a national organization ran an advertising campaign to convince people to quit or reduce their smoking.
Teaching Children About Food Safety Food Safety Professional Development for Early Childhood Educators.
PSY 325 AID Education Expert/psy325aid.com FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT
Welcome to AP Stats!. The AP Exam Thursday, May12, This is during the second week of AP testing and about 4 weeks after Spring Break. The TEST:
Practice As part of a program to reducing smoking, a national organization ran an advertising campaign to convince people to quit or reduce their smoking.
Teaching Undergraduate Statistics without Math
Joan Donohue University of South Carolina
Teaching Introductory Statistics
Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education
Peer Reviewed Journal Articles in the Community College Classroom
SYNTHESIS THROUGH SERVICE LEARNING IN STATISTICS-PART TWO
Practice As part of a program to reducing smoking, a national organization ran an advertising campaign to convince people to quit or reduce their smoking.
Analyzing and Interpreting Quantitative Data
Mastery Assessment in Teaching Statistics
Presentation transcript:

Amy Luginbuhl Phelps, PhD 1 DSI 2013 Baltimore

 Three major educational forces were coming together in the late 1990’s ◦ Experiential learning ◦ Service-Learning ◦ Statistical Reform producing the GAISE guidelines: ASA, ise/GAISECollege.htm 2 DSI 2013 Baltimore

 Angelo and Cross, 1993 ◦ Students learn more when they take an active role  Newmann, 1992 ◦ “Psychological Investment”: ◦ Combining traits of purpose and caring give students ownership and connection to real world 3 DSI 2013 Baltimore

 Campus Compact formed in 1985  Followed scattered activities of 60’s and 70’s  Initiated by Brown and Georgetown, now has more than 1,100 membership  Bok, 1990 (Former Harvard President)  Universities failing to teach students to respond to pressing social issues  National & Community Service Act 1990  $275 million allocated for SL from K thru higher education 4 DSI 2013 Baltimore

1. Emphasize statistical literacy and develop statistical thinking. 2. Use real data. 3. Stress conceptual understanding rather than mere knowledge of procedures. 4. Foster active learning in the classroom. 5. Use technology for developing concepts and analyzing data. 6. Use assessments to improve and evaluate student learning. 5 DSI 2013 Baltimore

 How many times per semester do you ◦ Use REAL data, not ‘real’ datasets from textbook  Generated by current research  Generated by the student(s) ◦ Grade student generated  Graphs  Excel/software analyses? ◦ Grade written interpretation/summary statements with business applications  They have to DO statistics with technology  They need to be held accountable (graded) DSI 2013 Baltimore6

 Written ◦ Students have to write  summary paragraphs  Inference and applications to business problems  Oral ◦ Be able to present to a general audience  Technical ◦ How to tell technology what you want ◦ Communication with Excel/statistical software DSI 2013 Baltimore 7

 Study/survey design  Data collection  Graphical and numerical summary  One sample inference ◦ Confidence Intervals ◦ Hypothesis testing  Communication (written/technological)skills ◦ Through bi-weekly lab assignments ◦ Interpretations Excel/StatCrunch outputs on quizzes and exams 8 DSI 2013 Baltimore

 Modeling and relationships  Two-sample t-test  Chi-square test of independence  ANOVA  SLR and MLR  Introduction to time-series, non-parametrics and/or data mining (Instructor choice)  Verbal and written communication ◦ Addition of student generated research projects presented the last week of class 9 DSI 2013 Baltimore

 Text: ◦ Business Statistics, 2nd Sharpe, DeVeaux, Velleman  Plan-Do-Report style ◦ Get them used to what actions/plans/purpose for collecting the data. ◦ Graphical numerical summary and analysis  start small, add and grow with each Lab  cumulative and repetitive  each subsequent lab uses techniques from previous lab  Work in pairs ◦ Helps reduce grading time DSI 2013 Baltimore 10

 Descriptive Statistics ◦ One and two-way pivot tables  Bar/pie charts  Row/column percent  joint, marginal, conditional ◦ Histograms, scatterplots  Mean and sd  Median and Q1-Q3  boxplots  Trendline/linear model  Sampling activity to collect own data (or SL) ◦ Use own data to  Construct CI  Hypothesis testing 11 DSI 2013 Baltimore

 Provides Excel/StatCrunch outputs ◦ These include summary stats, graphs etc…  Emphasize business interpretations and applications of results  Exams ◦ I allow the students to generate their own formula (cheat) sheets. ◦ I provide practice exams ◦ I write my own questions DSI 2013 Baltimore 12

 Stat I – Labs 4/5 combined using data we collect ourselves (‘capstone’ for stat I) ◦ Thanksgiving data ◦ Tangrams (S. Kuipers)  (NSF 2011 Grant “Playing games with a Purpose” ◦ Service-learning projects  Stat II (‘capstone’ for stat II) ◦ Either student generated ◦ Or Service-learning project DSI 2013 Baltimore 13

 Meet with CP 2-3 times ◦ Understand organization and needs ◦ Determine what activities class can do to emphasize learning goals and assist the organization (reciprocity)  Proposal- Briefly outline ◦ what is expected of instructor, students, CP ◦ Tentative timeline of when tasks will be done (align with student project tasks)  phelps.pdf phelps.pdf 14 DSI 2013 Baltimore

 Meet the CP and organization  Get HIPAA certification if necessary  Embed service project in classroom activities ◦ Create survey, data collection design ◦ Schedule data collection and data entry ◦ Use real-time data collection to emphasize concepts in class ◦ Final presentations and reports  I accomplish some of these activities through bi- weekly lab assignments 15 DSI 2013 Baltimore

 Perhaps, but the benefits are ◦ It feels like the right thing to do to ◦ Help students learn and ◦ Get excited about statistics (… well, maybe?) 16 DSI 2013 Baltimore

◦ Doing something REAL and they can see its importance in real time ◦ It helps me to stay ORGANIZED and on track. ◦ I have readily usable data they understand to use classroom resources to present  data problems we have to deal with  new statistical techniques  use for classroom quizzes, exams, … 17 DSI 2013 Baltimore

 Student research projects  Forces students to be accountable for material they need to learn  SL projects  Provides the opportunity to present data to real professionals and  Field questions from real professionals 18 DSI 2013 Baltimore

 By the end of a two-semester SL project  Two Programs for county foster teens ◦ Residential ◦ Community-based educational  600 cases ◦ ~300 client applications ◦ ~200 accepted in residential program ◦ ~100 community-based educational program  86 variables 19 DSI 2013 Baltimore

 Wow! It truly all came together  The students presented to the executive directors of the organization  They answered questions  Fall semester ◦ The students presented preliminary descriptives and potential trends thus fielding questions for future analyses  Spring semester ◦ Answered some key questions 20 DSI 2013 Baltimore

“…based on the results presented by the students, Ward Home has made changes in how they operate and how they compile and store their records.” 21 DSI 2013 Baltimore

22 Although we are just students learning, I feel we all came together to give Ward Home, Inc some really valuable statistical information… …when we told them the results, they were surprised things were different than they thought and it can help them improve their organization My time in this class and especially on the project feels like a complete success. One day I hope I can be as helpful to other organizations. The project definitely tested the abilities I learned this semester..it is wonderful that we were able to give back while learning valuable information ourselves DSI 2013 Baltimore