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Seven mini-stats lessons, crammed into nine minutes.

 I found this Tweet, which leads to a brief report on BBC. A recent report from the World Obesity Federation shows COVID death rates are higher in countries where more than half the population is overweight. Cause and effect, or bad statistics? @TimHarford and @d_spiegel explore - with some maths from me. You can listen on @BBCSounds https://t.co/hevepmz8RC — stuart mcdonald (@ActuaryByDay) March 14, 2021 The BBC has a show called "More or Less," and they explained a recent research finding connecting obesity to COVID 19 deaths.  Here is the original research study . Here is a pop treatment of the original study . For more stats news, you can follow  "More or Less" on Twitter . And they cram, like, a half dozen lessons in this story. It is amazing. I've tried to highlight some of the topics touched upon in this story. How can you use it in class? I think it would be a good final exam question. You could have your students listen to the story, and highlight ...

Statsystem Stat Memes

Go follow Statsystem ( Facebook , Instagram ). They are a smarty pants who dreams and thinks in stats memes. I know these are silly and hilarious and fun. I think these are good for a nerd chuckle for ourselves. And who doesn't need more nerd chuckles? I also think these are light, funny, accessible ways to back up a more complex stats lesson with a succinct meme that conveys the guts of a lesson.  See: Power Regression: Central Limit Theorem: T-tests: And don't forget the big picture:

One sample t-tests, puppies, real data.

This teaching example: 1. Is psychology research. 2. Features the actual data from the generous and helpful Dr. Bray . 3. Features GIFs. EVERYTHING is better with GIFs. 4. Includes puppies. 5. Includes a good ol' Psych Statistics standard: The one-sample t-test. Okay, get ready. I first learned about Dr. Emily Bray's dog cognition research via Twitter . Never let it be said that good things don't happen on Twitter. Occasionally.  1 Dogs are known for their ability to cooperate with humans and read our social cues. But are these skills biologically prepared? To find out, we tested 375 puppies at 8.5 weeks on 4 social cognition tasks (task descriptions: https://t.co/aETequNBce ) #AnimBehav2021 #Cognition pic.twitter.com/7vN2lp82Dp — Emily Bray (@DrEmilyBray) January 27, 2021 This is such a helpful way to share your research. This example works for your Cognitive or RM classes as well as your stats class, since this thread illustrates not just her findings but her methods. T...