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Paris Olympics 2024: I'm here for the dank memes

 

Whataburger Index: Operationalizing power outages in hurricane ravaged Texas.

As a stats nerd, I love it when clever people make lives easier by finding clever, easy, indirect ways to estimate the thing they want to measure. As a statistics instructor, I find such examples engaging, as they encourage students to think critically and nurture their statistical literacy.  Like the Waffle Shop index. TL;DR: During weather emergencies, the federal government tracks whether or not Waffle Shops are open as a proxy for the severity of damage in a community. Waffle Shops are tough as hell, and if they close, a community needs help.  Below is a map of Waffle Houses. https://www.scrapehero.com/store/wp-content/uploads/maps/Waffle_House_USA.png Due to Hurricane Beryl, the people of Houston, Texas discovered an even more accurate measure the severity of electricity outages: The Whattaburger Index:   https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=8242206945824619&set=gm.2698315720337038&idorvanity=1416658058502817 Certainly, Waffle House exists in Texas. 126...

Predictions are only as good as the regularity of the event

Weather prediction is data. This makes weather data-related stories and examples highly relatable. The Washington Post published an interactive article t hat shows how accurate weather predictions are for a given city in the United States. This means that we, stats instructors, can use this page to provide a geographically personalized lesson on weather prediction, the limitations of data, and why predictions about the future are only as good as the consistency of the past. I also like this example because it isn't terribly mathy and encourages statistical literacy.  Kommenda and Stevens, writing for the Washington Post, recently shared a story on the accuracy of weather predictions based on time away from the target day. Here, the DV is prediction accuracy, operationalized using the difference between predicted and actual high temperature. You could always ask your students how they would operationalize weather...or maybe some weather matters more than others? Folks in Erie...