“This course will cover descriptive statistics, frequency distributions, probability, binomial and normal distributions, statistical inference, linear regression, and correlation.” 4 credits Prerequisite: 2 units in algebra Objectives: In this course you will gain problem solving skills that will allow you to decide for yourself if research involving data is trustworthy or not. Mathematical calculations are necessary but more important is interpreting the values computed. At the end of the semester you will be able to organize data using numerical and graphical summaries, apply properties to data based on the distribution that it follows, make calculations that prove or disprove a hypothesis, interpret the trend in new data compared to a previous standard, diagnose the trustworthiness of inference, collect data without bias and diagnose bias in collected data. Faculty Contact: TA information: Jenny Shook 416 Thomas (814) 865-6164 for emergencies like missing an assignment Sec 13, 14 Brittany Fischer 321 Thomas Sec 15, 16 Josh Goldstein 301 Thomas Email: Use ANGEL: “Faculty” for non-emergency questions Email: bmf5007@psu.edu Email: jrg326@psu.edu Office hours: Tuesday 1:30-3:30pm Office Hours: Tuesday and Thursday 10-11am Office Hours: Thursday 1:30-3:30pm Materials: Textbook: Utts and Heckard‟s Mind On Statistics Third Edition, Thomson and the included CD. Calculator: Any kind that can compute a square root (graphing ok) – cell phones prohibited. Essentials: Notebook or paper to take notes on lectures, to work out problems in class; pen, pencil, eraser, etc. Computer: Two days each week you will have the use of a computer in class (lab). Outside of class, most computer labs on campus can provide the same information as do the ones in class. You will need to access ANGEL regularly for all course information. Course Format: You are encouraged to travel through the world of statistics with your classmates. Each week you will receive a reading assignment. The lecture will present concepts and examples that illustrate the concepts in the reading assignment. At the end of each lecture, a brief activity is to be completed and turned in before the end of that class as attendance. The following two classes will be time for the teacher and classmates to work together through examples illustrating concepts from the reading using statistical software to solve the problems. Weekly practice chapter quizzes in ANGEL and weekly homework is due online in ANGEL quizzes, all to be completed outside of class. Projects are assigned throughout the semester with time to work on them in class and are to be completed outside of class, graded by project quizzes. Unit exams will be given throughout the semester in the e-testing center during a time you schedule. A cumulative final exam will be given as scheduled by the University. Work load: Print out the calendar at the end of this syllabus and the “assignments” document in the Resources folder on ANGEL and refer to them regularly. Please check ANGEL regularly for new information, announcements and course emails. Each week you will have a reading assignment, an online quiz, and a set of homework questions from the textbook to submit in an online quiz. Projects are to be completed in a quiz outside of class with class time for discussion of ideas. Because the activities may be worked on in class, you are expected to work together with your classmates while maintaining your own individuality in your work. Course Policies: Reading assignments, lectures, and study guides are posted on ANGEL. You are encouraged to print out and review each lecture before it is presented in class, bringing a printout to the lecture to assist you in following along. Printing out the lecture activity before class is a requirement. Homework quizzes, chapter quizzes, project quizzes and exams will be graded online for immediate feedback and are subject to change based on Mrs. Shook‟s approval. Failure to follow directions correctly will result in no score for that quiz or exam. Lecture and lab activities will be graded for attempt but not accuracy as attendance. Grades will be updated monthly on ANGEL. You are expected to complete all your own work in a collaborative setting. Please remember that copying anyone else‟s work is considered cheating. As a reminder, the University has a policy on academic honesty. You are expected to abide by the procedures set forth in the University‟s document at http://www.psu.edu/dept/ufs/policies/47-00.html#49-20 . Any student in this course who has a disability that may prevent him or her from fully demonstrating his or her abilities should contact Mrs. Shook personally as soon as possible, so we can discuss accommodations necessary to ensure full participation and facilitate your educational opportunity. Assignments: Weekly Quizzes: There are generally two quizzes for content mastery due each week – one based on the reading assignment above and the other based on specific homework questions at the end of the reading assignment as listed below. Due to exam scheduling, reading assignment quizzes may not fall exactly in line with the homework quizzes, so be sure to pay attention to the due dates. It is strongly recommended that you complete the read quiz the same day that the associated lecture is given and the HW quiz within the following 24 hours despite the due date being later than such. Completing these quizzes sooner rather than later will help you retain the lecture information and cut down on studying time. Reading Assignments (please read these before the lecture on each chapter): Ch 1-2 Ch 3-4 Ch 5 Ch 6, skip 6.2 Ch 7 Ch 8, skip 8.8 Ch 9-10, skip 9.9 Ch 11 Ch 12 and 9.9 Ch 13 Ch 14-15, skip 14.4 and 15.3 Ch 16, skip 16.4 Ch 17 Read quizzes: Complete the reading assignment above before you open the read quiz for the week. You may use classmates, our lecture notes and the textbook to assist you during the quiz. HW quizzes: Complete each homework question as listed below before you open the HW quiz for the week, having your completed work in front of you to answer the questions. It may also be useful to have the textbook in front of you to aid you in answering the specific quiz questions as each quiz question may refer to the process of completing the homework question, not just the final answer itself. A typical question will read like this: What is your answer for question 2.00 part a to one decimal place? HW Assignments: Ch 1 and 2: 1.3, 1.9, 2.6, 2.13, 2.20, 2.24, 2.31, 2.35, 2.38, 2.53, 2.54, 2.64, 2.84, 2.97, 2.102 Ch 3 and 4: 3.6, 3.10, 3.13, 3.18, 3.22, 3.41, 3.42, 3.86, 4.2, 4.6, 4.7, 4.29, 4.30, 4.37, 4.72 Ch 5: 5.1, 5.2, 5.4, 5.6, 5.10, 5.13, 5.16, 5.21, 5.24, 5.29, 5.34, 5.46, 5.47, 5.67, 5.69 Ch 6: 6.2, 6.3, 6.4, 6.7, 6.8, 6.11, 6.30, 6.34, 6.36, 6.38, 6.41, 6.43a-e, 6.47, 6.53, 6.63 Ch 10: 10.2, 10.5, 10.13, 10.18, 10.22, 10.25, 10.26, 10.30, 10.44, 10.46, 10.49, 10.53, 10.54.10.58 Ch 11: 11.8, 11.11, 11.15, 11.18, 11.20, 11.21, 11.23, 11.25, 11.30, 11.39, 11.40, 11.42, 11.44, 11.50 Ch 12: 12.5, 12.8, 12.9, 12.15, 12.17, 12.19, 12.24, 12.35, 12.46, 12.58, 12.61, 12.68, 12.71 (p-hat = 0.75, not p; error in book) Ch 7: 7.6, 7.11, 7.16, 7.17, 7.22, 7.23, 7.26, 7.34, 7.37, 7.40, 7.45, 7.46, 7.48, 7.64, 7.69 Ch 13: 13.1, 13.2, 13.6, 13.10, 13.12, 13.14, 13.15, 13.28, 13.33, 13.37, 13.43, 13.47, 13.67 Ch 8: 8.1, 8.7, 8.10, 8.11, 8.13, 8.15, 8.17, 8.19, 8.27, 8.30, 8.32, 8.34, 8.37, 8.51, 8.52 Ch 14 and 15: 14.1, 14.4, 14.16, 14.18, 14.35, 14.42, 14.43, 15.2, 15.3, 15.37, 15.48, 15.49 Ch 9: 9.10, 9.21, 9.24, 9.25, 9.29, 9.31, 9.45, 9.47, 9.54, 9.57, 9.60, 9.66, 9.73, 9.131, 9.134 Ch 16: 16.3, 16.4, 16.7, 16.12, 16.13, 16.15, 16.17, 16.19, 16.22, 16.23, 16.25, 16.39 Policies: Once you open the quiz, time starts and the quiz will submit when time expires even if you close the browser and do not look at any of the questions. Be sure to be logged on to a reliable network before you open any of the quizzes. Failure to follow directions and / or occurrence of technology errors will not warrant a make-up. If you have problems with ANGEL, contact ANGEL support immediately (the (?) button between the home and logout buttons on the left) and they will respond quickly. Your instructor or TA cannot assist when ANGEL has an error as they are not part of the ANGEL Support Team; you must contact ANGEL Support when you have the problem with ANGEL. All quizzes must be submitted by 11:59:59pm on the Wednesday due date. Out of the allowed attempts, only the highest quiz score will count as your final score in the reports tab (after all the questions have been graded). Read quiz Syllabus and Ch 1-2, HW quiz Ch 1-2 due Jan 19 Read quiz Ch 3-4, HW quiz Ch 3-4 HW quiz Ch 5 Read quiz Ch 5-6, HW quiz Ch 6 Read quiz Ch 7, HW quiz Ch 7 Read quiz Ch 8, HW quiz Ch 8 Read quiz Ch 9, HW quiz Ch 9 Read quiz Ch 10-11, HW quiz Ch 10 HW quiz Ch 11 Read quiz Ch 12-13, HW quiz Ch 12 Read quiz Ch 14-15, HW quiz Ch 13 HW quiz Ch 14-15 Read quiz Ch 16-17, HW quiz Ch 16 due Jan 26 due Feb 2 due Feb 9 due Feb 16 due Mar 2 due Mar 16 due Mar 23 due Mar 30 due Apr 6 due Apr 13 due Apr 20 due Apr 27 Projects: Project details are available on ANGEL the week of the due date. You do not have to wait until the project is discussed to start working on it. Please do not wait until the due day to start the project. You only have 1 chance to take the quiz so make sure you are on a reliable computer and are ready to complete the quiz before you open it. Remember to complete each project outside of the project quiz; if you only work within the quiz and there is a power failure, all your work will be lost. Quiz questions may require you to use the HTML editor in ANGEL; please contact ANGEL Support for additional help with this feature if you are not certain how to use it. If working in a group, each group member must submit their own quiz; group members not completing a quiz will get no score. If you have problems with ANGEL, contact ANGEL support immediately (the (?) button between the home and logout buttons on the left) and they will respond quickly. Your instructor or TA cannot assist when ANGEL has an error as they are not part of the ANGEL Support Team; you must contact ANGEL Support when you have the problem with ANGEL. Each project quiz must be submitted before 11:59:59pm on the Friday due date. Late project quizzes are not accepted. Do not email your quiz answers to your instructor or TA. Projects will only be graded via the quiz on ANGEL. Quizzes not submitted by the due date and time will not be scored, even if answers are saved and complete. Failure to follow these directions will result in no score for the project quiz. Project 1 quiz is due Jan 21 Project 2 quiz is due Jan 28 Project 3 quiz is due Feb 11 Project 4 quiz is due Mar 4 Project 5 quiz is due Apr 29 Attendance Activities: All in-class assignments are available at least one day prior to the scheduled class time. Please review the activity before coming to class as it is practice that you complete in class. You can then continue your learning as you check your accuracy the following day when solutions are posted on ANGEL. The activity after each lecture is called “LGM Ch ”, which stands for Large Group Meeting, and then the chapter of the lecture. This activity, found at the end of the lecture document, is to be printed out before class, completed after the lecture part of class ends and is to be turned in before class ends as proof of attendance for that class. LGMs must be labeled with the LGM name / number, your name, access ID ( @psu.edu), and your section number. There is one LGM for each lecture. Only the LGM for the current lecture can be turned in at that lecture for credit. If you miss class for an excused reason (contact Mrs. Shook prior to class about it), you will receive an “E” for the LGM activity when it is completed and turned in with documented proof of the excuse to Mrs. Shook before the missed class, not after, unless Mrs. Shook directs otherwise. The activity in each lab is called “Lab Ch__” and is partially completed by hand and partially by using statistical software, directions for which are provided with each activity. This activity is to be completed electronically on the lab computer (save it before typing any answers and save often to a location you know during class), worked on during class, and submitted into an ANGEL drop box in before the end of the class time as proof of attendance for that class. Labs must be completely uploaded in the correct drop box for each assignment, labeled with your name, access ID ( @psu.edu), and section number. In the drop box, call the file “Lab Ch? for „yourID‟@psu.edu”, and include your name, psu email and section number in the title of the submission. Attach the lab activity you have worked on and be certain to hit the submit button (not just the attach button). Once you have made the submission, it is imperative that you check that ANGEL shows your submission in the drop box. Labs can be submitted prior to your scheduled class time; excused absences are encouraged to make such a submission. Late or pending submissions will not be graded. If you have problems with ANGEL, contact ANGEL Support immediately (the (?) button between the home and logout buttons on the left) and they will respond quickly. Your instructor or TA cannot assist when ANGEL has an error as they are not part of the ANGEL Support Team; you must contact ANGEL Support when you have the problem with ANGEL. Exams: Study guides are posted on ANGEL; only topics listed on the designated study guides will appear on the Exam – if it is not listed, then it is not on the exam. Make sure you have signed up for an exam session at https://clc.its.psu.edu/eTesting/Students (the testing center will email your psu email account approximately one week before the exam to let you know the slots are available for scheduling; check your junk folder if you do not hear from them). All necessary tables and scrap paper will be provided for you during the exam; scrap paper must be turned in before you leave the testing center. You may bring a calculator and writing utensil. Also, a front and back of one 8.5”X11” sheet of handwritten notes is allowed for each exam, to be turned in at the end of the exam with the scrap paper. Anyone using a sheet containing non-handwritten material, or not turning in their notes and / or scrap paper will have their exam score changed to a 0. It is strongly recommended that you put your name and PSU email address on both of these sheets. If you have to miss an exam due to a documented excuse, you must notify Mrs. Shook prior to your scheduled exam time and set up a time for a make-up within one week of the original exam due date. Exam 1: Ch 1-4 on Feb 2 Exam 2: Ch 5-7 on Feb 23 Exam 3: Ch 8-11 on Mar 29 Exam 4: Ch 12-15 on Apr 20 Final Exam: Ch 1-17, as scheduled by the University The cumulative final exam (50 multiple choice questions) will be scheduled by the University. You must take the final exam at the scheduled time (or during the conflict time if you schedule for one). All necessary tables will be provided as is scrap paper. You may bring a calculator and writing utensil. Also, two 8.5”X11” sheets of handwritten notes are allowed (front and back). Grading: Each of the 13 HW quizzes and 10 Read quizzes are worth 10 points. Each of the attendance activities are worth 2 points. Each exam is worth 100 points, including the final exam. The first four projects are worth 50 points each and the fifth project is 100 points. Assignment Total Points Quizzes Attendance Exams Projects Total points possible: 230 070 500 300 1100 If your total points are: 930 and above 900 – 929 870 – 899 830 – 869 800 – 829 770 – 799 700 – 769 600 – 699 599 and below Your letter grade will be: A AB+ B BC+ C D F Semester Schedule: Week: 1: Jan 11 – 14 Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Syllabus, Lecture Ch 1 Lab Introduction Lecture Ch 2 Lab Ch 1 and 2 LGMCh1and2 2: Jan 18 – 21 Project 1 HWCh1and2, ReadQuiz SyllabusCh1and2 Project 1 Lecture Ch 3-4, LGMCh3and4 3: Jan 25 – 28 Lab Ch 3 -4 HWCh3and4, ReadQuiz Ch3and4 Project 2 Lecture Ch 5, LGMCh5 4: Feb 1 – 4 Lab Ch 5a HWCh5, Exam 1:Ch 1-4 Lab Ch 5b Lecture Ch 6, LGMCh6 5: Feb 8 – 11 Lab Ch 6 HWCh6, ReadQuizCh5and6 Project 3 Lecture Ch 7, LGMCh7 6: Feb 15 – 18 Lab Ch 7a HWCh7, ReadQuizCh7 Lab Ch 7b Lecture Ch 8a, LGMCh8a 7: Feb 22 – 25 Lab Ch 8a Exam 2: Ch 5-7 Project 4 Lecture Ch 8b, LGMCh8b 8: Mar 1 – 4 Lab Ch 8b HWCh8, ReadQuizCh8 Project 4 Lecture Ch 9-10, LGMCh9and10 9: Mar 15 – 18 Lab Ch 9 HWCh9, ReadQuizCh9 Lab Ch 10 Lecture Ch 11, LGMCh11 10: Mar 22 – 25 Lab Ch 11a HWCh10, ReadQuiz Ch10and11 Lab Ch 11b Lecture Ch 12, LGMCh12 Lab Ch 12a, Exam 3: Ch 8-11 HWCh11 Lab Ch 12b Lecture Ch 13, LGMCh13 12: Apr 5 – 8 Lab Ch 13a HWCh12, ReadQuiz Ch12and13 Lab Ch 13b Lecture Ch 14-15, LGMCh14and15 13: Apr 12 – 15 Lab Ch 14 HWCh13, ReadQuiz Ch114and15 Lab Ch 15 Lecture Ch 16, LGMCh16 14: Apr 19 – 22 Lab Ch 16a HWCh14and15, Exam 4: Ch 12-15 Lab Ch 16b Lecture Ch 17, LGMCh17 15: Apr 26 - 29 Project 5 HWCh16, ReadQuizCh16and17 Project 5 11: Mar 29 – Apr 1 Final exam as scheduled by the University via Elion. Final Review