AP Statistics Curriculum 2007 IntroTools

From Socr

Revision as of 05:08, 20 June 2007 by IvoDinov (Talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

Contents

General Advance-Placement (AP) Statistics Curriculum - Statistics with Tools

Statistics with Tools (Calculators and Computers)

A critical component in any data analysis or process understanding protocol is that one needs to develop a model that has a compact analytical representation (e.g., formulas, symbolic equations, etc.) The model is used to study the process theoretically. Emperical validation of the model is carried by pluggin in data and actually testing the model. This validation stop may be done manually by computing the model prediction or model inference from recorded measurements. This typically may be done by hand only for small number of observations (<10). In practice, most of the time, we use or write algorithms and computer programs that automate these calculations for better efficiency, accuracy and consistency in applying the model to larger datasets.

There are a number of statistical software tools (programs) that one can employ for data analysis and statistical processing. Some of these are: SAS, SYSTAT, SPSS, R, SOCR.

Approach & Model Validation

Before any statistical analysis tool is employed to analyze a dataset, one needs to carefully review the prerequisites and assumptions that this model demands about the data and study design.

For example, if we measure the weight and height of students and want to study gender, age or race differences or association between weight and height, we need to make sure our sample size is large enough, these weight and height measurements are random (i.e., we do not have repeated measurements of the same student or twin-measurements) and that the students we can measure are a representative sample of the population that we are making inference about (e.g., 8th-grade students).

In this example, suppose we record the following 6 pairs of {weight (kg), height (cm)}:

Student Index 1 2 3 4 5 6
Weight 60 75 58 67 56 80
Height 167 175 152 172 166 175

We can easily compute the average weight (66 kg) and height (167 cm) using the sample mean-formula. We can also compute these averages using the SOCR Charts, or any other statistical package, as shown in the image below.

Computational Resources: Internet-based SOCR Tools

Several of the SOCR tools and resources will be shown later to be useful in a variety of sitiations. Here is just a list of these with one example of each:

Hands-on Examples & Activities

Let's try to plot some of this data and perhaps apply a simple linear regression analysis to tease out the relations between average brain volume (MEAN) and age (AGE).



References




Translate this page:

(default)

Deutsch

Español

Français

Italiano

Português

日本語

България

الامارات العربية المتحدة

Suomi

इस भाषा में

Norge

한국어

中文

繁体中文

Русский

Nederlands

Ελληνικά

Hrvatska

Česká republika

Danmark

Polska

România

Sverige

Personal tools