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Showing posts with the label nominal variables

Ways to use funny meme scales in your stats classes

Have you ever heard of the theory that there are multiple people worldwide thinking about the same novel thing at the same time? It is the multiple discovery hypothesis of invention . Like, multiple great minds around the world were working on calculus at the same time. Well, I think a bunch of super-duper psychology professors were all thinking about scale memes and pedagogy at the same time. Clearly, this is just as impressive as calculus. Who were some of these great minds? 1) Dr.  Molly Metz maintains a curated list of hilarious "How you doing?" scales.  2) Dr. Esther Lindenström posted about using these scales as student check-ins. 3) I was working on a blog post about using such scales to teach the basics of variables.  So, I decided to create a post about three ways to use these scales in your stats classes:  1) Teaching the basics of variables. 2) Nominal vs. ordinal scales.  3) Daily check-in with your students.  1. Teach your students the basics...

CNN's The most effective ways to curb climate change might surprise you

CNN created an interactive quiz that will teach your students about a) making personal changes to support the environment, b) rank-order data, and c) nominal data. https://www.cnn.com/interactive/2019/04/specials/climate-change-solutions-quiz/ The website leads users through a quiz. For eight categories of environmental crisis solutions, you are asked to rank solutions by their effectiveness. Here are the instructions: Notice the three nominal categories for each solution: What you can do, What industries can do, What policymakers can do. Below, I've highlighted these data points for each of the "Our home and cities" solutions. There are also many, many examples of ordinal data. For each intervention category, the user is presented with several solutions and they must reorder the solutions from most to least effective. How the page looks when you are presented with solutions to rank order: The website then "grades" your respons...

Using the Global Terrorism Database's code book to teach levels of measurement, variable types

A database codebook is the documentation of all of the data entry rules and coding schemes used in a given database. And code books usually contain examples of every kind of variable and level of measurement you need to teach your students during the first two weeks of Intro Stats. You can use any code book from any database relevant to your own scholarship as an example in class. Or perhaps you can find a code book particularly relevant to the students or majors you are teaching. Here, I will describe how to use Global Terrorism Database ’s code book  for this purpose. The Global Terrorism Database is housed at the University of Maryland and has been tracking national and international terrorism since 1970 and has collected information on  over 170, 000 attacks. So, the database in and of itself could be useful in class. But, I will focus on just the code book for now, as I think this example cuts across disciplines and interests as all of our students are aware of terroris...

National Geographic's "Are you typical?"

This animated short from National Geographic touches on averages, median, mode, sampling, and the need for cross-cultural research. When defining the typical (modal) human, the video provides good examples of when to use mode (when determining which country has the largest population) and when to use median (median age in the world). It also illustrates the need to collect cross-cultural data before making any broad statements about typicality (when describing how "typical" is relative to a population).