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Showing posts with the label APA formatting

xkcd comics and statistical thinking.

Xkcd is a gift to Statisitcs instructors . Author Randall Monroe shares his humor and statistics knowledge. I think that many of his comics can be used as extra credit points , in that you don't get the joke unless you get the conceptual statistical knowledge behind the joke. NOTE: I have included images here, but you really, really should go to the original comics and cursor over for the messages to view the alternative text. NOTE TWO: This is not a comprehensive list but I will try to update it as Monroe shares more comics. To teach APA formatting: https://xkcd.com/833/ To explain sufficient sample size in research: https://xkcd.com/507/ To explain good statistics manners/how to appropriately ask for stats help: https://m.xkcd.com/2116/ To explain error bars: https://xkcd.com/2110/ T-test and the t-curve: https://xkcd.com/2110/ Linear relationships: https://xkcd.com/605/ The Normal Curve: https://xkcd.com/2118/ Cherry picking, p-...

Dr. Mages' "APA Exposed: Everything you wanted to know about APA formatting but were afraid to ask."

Teaching undergraduates APA style is not fun. It is not fun for teachers. It is not fun for students. However, I think that the more tools that we, the teachers, have in order to convey the rules of APA style, the more likely we are to find something that finally sticks for our students. This week, I offer one such tool created by Dr. Wendy K. Mages. Dr. Mages created an online, self-paced, free Powerpoint presentation that teaches the essentials of APA style. Lessons are presented in a PowerPoint-esque format with a voice-over (as well as a transcript) I like that Dr. Mages includes some of her own experiences grading students papers in order to keep current students from making frequent mistakes that Dr. Mages has encountered. She also offers plenty of original examples and uses appropriate Powerpoint animations/highlighting to engage the viewer.

Statsy pictures/memes for not awful PowerPoints

I take credit for none of these. A few have been posted here before. by Rayomond Biesinger, http://fifteen.ca/ Creator unknown, usually attributed to clipart? http://www.sciencemag.org/content/331/6018.cover-expansion https://www.flickr.com/photos/lendingmemo/ https://lovestats.wordpress.com/2014/11/10/why-do-kids-and-you-need-to-learn-statistics-mrx/ http://memecollection.net/dmx-statistics/ 9/23/15 Psychometrics: Interval scale with proper anchors 2/9/16 4/19/16 4/28/16 "Symbols that math urgently needs to adopt" https://mathwithbaddrawings.com/2016/04/27/symbols-that-math-urgently-needs-to-adopt/ http://www.mrlovenstein.com/ http://www.smbc-comics.com/ 9/8/16 2/9/2107 https://hbr.org/2017/02/if-you-want-to-motivate-employees-stop-trusting-your-instincts https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/jan/19/crisis-of-statistics-big-data-democracy?CMP=share_btn_tw 2/13/17 ...