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* Please find your seat (name on note card). Please take a textbook from the counter at the back of the room Please look over the book for any problems.

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Presentation on theme: "* Please find your seat (name on note card). Please take a textbook from the counter at the back of the room Please look over the book for any problems."— Presentation transcript:

1 * Please find your seat (name on note card)

2 Please take a textbook from the counter at the back of the room Please look over the book for any problems Record your book number and any problems on the sheet being passed around.

3 * Grew up in Philly and NJ * Went to Virginia Tech * Enjoy running (half marathons, 10K, etc.) * Coach XC * Teach AP Stat, Stat & Data Analysis, and Applied Math * Graduated with degree in Math, minors in Spanish and Statistics

4 * Gathering & analyzing data * Making conclusions from data… both small and broad * Combination of Math and Writing

5 * 3 ring binder * Book * CALCULATOR: 83+, 84, or 84+ * Personal Responsibility & Respect * College student behavior * Cell phone policy

6 * Tough grading… picky! * WILL prepare you for the exam (whether you are taking it or not) * FAST PACED! * Work Load (College level)

7 * WEDNESDAY, MAY 15 th, 12:00 pm * Review sessions at night in April * Strongly encouraged to take exam * College credit, saving $, etc.

8 * Absences, Lates, Cuts * Amount: HW & CW * Grading: HW = 5 points CW = varied * Credit: HW = completeness CW = correctness * Late assignments: HW = NO CW = ½ credit

9 * Announced/unannounced * Calculators- allowed on all, cleared before & after * Amount (3) * Grading & Lateness * MC & FR * Re-tests

10 * Final Exam = 14%, all MC * Core Assessments = 3% each, in class * Before school * After school certain days (check first) * 4 th block

11 Marking Period: HW = 10% Classwork = 20% Quizzes/Tests/Projects = 70% * Borderline grades (79.48%) * MP1 = 40% * MP2 = 40% * Final Exam = 14% * Assessments = 6%

12 http://mcnelis.wikispaces.com

13 PRE- ASSESSMENT Please get out a piece of paper, put your name at the top Complete the following on the paper

14 1)CREATE A BAR CHART FROM THE FOLLOWING DATA. Party affiliations in a sample of Bucks County residents: DRDDR RRRIR RDIIR RRDRD

15 2) CREATE A PIE CHART FROM THE FOLLOWING DATA. Ratings from a sample of 2007 movie releases: GGPGG PG-13 RGR PG-13 R PG-13PG-13 RGPG PGPG PG-13 GG

16 3) CREATE A STEMPLOT FROM THE FOLLOWING DATA: A small sample of pitch speeds from an MLB pitcher. 95101878992 9394929895 9190887990

17 4) WRITE DOWN HOW OLD YOU THINK I AM. Hint: I have graduated from college (22) and am younger than 45.

18 Read pages 2-3. Flip through the book when done. What did you notice about this textbook compared to textbooks from other math classes? Textbooks!

19 Three parts of a complete answer. The tell part is usually the most important! Great examples to follow when doing your homework and classwork. Will be used as closure activities Important Parts of this Textbook

20 Great section for helping you not make common mistakes.  Chapter Summary  Definitions with page numbers  Think; Show; Tell again

21 Chapter 2 - Data * Read p. 7 to middle of p. 9 in the book Summary: * Context of the data is absolutely essential before we do anything! * The W’s (and H): Who, What, When, Where, Why, How * Data tables help organize the data * Each row of a data table is called an individual case

22 * Individuals do not always mean people * Cases are usually from a SAMPLE of a larger POPULATION (hopefully representative) * Individuals = the things that we want to collect data from. People, animals, cars, etc. * POPULATION = ALL individuals that we want to conclude about * SAMPLE = small group of the population that we actually collect data from. Use this data to conclude about the population

23 Read to middle of p. 11 Variables are the “WHAT” of the data- things that were observed or collected. Two types of variables: 1.Categorical: variable that names categories (words or numeric) 2.Quantitative: variable with numeric values, makes sense to take an average (must have units) - Examples: Colleges/Universities

24 -p. 17 #13-18 -Take online Quia survey by midnight tonight! See wikispace for link! -Read Ch. 1 -- 3 -Print Ch. 3 notes if you want them! -Print formula sheet for the course -Last page of fact sheet printed and signed- DUE FRIDAY Homework


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