Exploring Topics in Social Psychology and Statistics

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Dive into a diverse agenda covering warm-up activities, a review of the Kitty Genovese case, engaging discussions on beliefs and social issues, a peek into the importance of statistics, and thought-provoking questions regarding societal topics like the legal drinking age and gun control laws.


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  1. Agenda Warm Up Kitty Genoviese What do you believe? Latane & Darley (1968) Review Warm Up Bureaucratic stuff Update: Wednesday 2/19 Paper airplanes Thursday 3/26 Casino Day Wednesday 4/15 Tossing Hershey s kisses Exit Pass Homework (AP) 1. Read the syllabus thoroughly. 2. Go to the class website (URL on syllabus). Look around. 3. Pg.7 #1, 2, 5 4. Student questionnaire (green) ANONYMOUS Statistics survey (yellow) 5 min 10 min 15 min 10 min 5 min 10 min

  2. Warm Up Find your name tag. Read the definitions (in green) below, then use your Warm- Up form (white) to answer questions #1-3: Quantitative: Uses numerical values for which arithmetic operations (adding, averaging, etc.) make sense. Ex: Hair length. Categorical: Places an individual into one of several groups or categories. Ex: Hair color. 1) Write down 1 example of a categorical variable. 2) Write down 1 example of a quantitative variable. 3) Is a phone number categorical or quantitative? Why?

  3. Catherine Susan Kitty Genovese March 13th 1964, Queens, New York City Arrived home at 3:15am, parked 100 feet from apartment Approached by Winston Mosley Ran away, stabbed twice in back Screamed Oh my God, he stabbed me! Help me! Mosley ran away, returned 10 minutes later Found Kitty, barely conscious, at doorstep Stabbed her repeatedly, stole $49 Entire attack lasted 30 minutes. Heard by 12 neighbors. Why didn t anyone call the police?

  4. What do you believe? I will put a question up on the board. Go to the Station that is closest to your opinion. Yes, definitely. Yes, with some limitations. Neutral, or Decline to state. No, with some limitations. No, definitely not. Practice: You like Hawaiian-style pizza. (ham and pineapple)

  5. What do you believe? (5 total) 1. Should the legal drinking age be lowered to 18? 2. Should teenagers have access to free condoms on high-school campuses? 3. Should marijuana be legal recreationally? 4. Should we have more gun control laws? 5. Should there be a wall along the border between the United States and Mexico?

  6. Why I Love Statistics 1. They solve arguments.

  7. What do you believe? (5 total) 1. Should the legal drinking age be lowered to 18? 2. Should teenagers have access to free condoms on high-school campuses? 3. Should marijuana be legal recreationally? 4. Should we have more gun control laws? 5. Should there be a wall along the border between the United States and Mexico?

  8. Catherine Susan Kitty Genovese March 13th 1964, Queens, New York City Arrived home at 3:15am, parked 100 feet from apartment Approached by Winston Mosley Ran away, stabbed twice in back Screamed Oh my God, he stabbed me! Help me! Mosley ran away, returned 10 minutes later Found Kitty, barely conscious, at doorstep Stabbed her repeatedly, stole $49 Entire attack lasted 30 minutes. Heard by 12 neighbors. Why didn t anyone call the police?

  9. Latane & Darley (1968) Hypothesis: People are less likely to help in an emergency if other people are around. Individual in room, taking a questionnaire Fake smoke comes through vents Two conditions: Alone, or With two confederates who don t respond

  10. Latane & Darley (1968) Alone 7 Number of participants 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 1 min. 2 min. 3 min. 4 min. 5 min. 6 min. No report

  11. Latane & Darley (1968) 2 confederates 10 Number of participants 8 6 4 2 0 1 min. 2 min. 3 min. 4 min. 5 min. 6 min. No report

  12. Why I Love Statistics 1. They solve arguments. 2. They deceive. Interest rates 3.500% 3.000% 2.500% 2.000% 1.500% 1.000% 0.500% 0.000% 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

  13. Bureaucratic Things

  14. 1 of 3 My rules 1. Don t waste my time. Don t waste my time. Don t waste my time. Don t waste my time. Don t waste my time. Don t waste my time.

  15. Smartphones and Brain Drain Adrian Ward, University of Texas at Austin, April 2017 Study design: Participants were randomly told to place their smartphones: 1) on the desk face down, or 2) in their pocket. All phones were silenced. Participants took tests that measured participants available cognitive capacity (ability to hold & process data). Results: Participants with phones on desk face-down had significantly lowered cognitive capacity. Mere presence of smartphone impairs cognitive functioning even though people think they re giving full attention to a task. Didn t matter if phone was turned on vs. off, or face up vs. face down. Your cognitive capacity is significantly reduced when your smartphone is within reach .even if it s off, or facing down.

  16. 1 of 2 Syllabus Keep this. Read this. It has a lot of important information. Website rivercity.wusd.k12.ca.us/subsites/James-Colligan Homework recommended-but-optional, usually odd # s (to check answers in back), may be used on Checkups Checkups 15% of grade, 5-10 min. at start of class, ~same as HW. Supplies needed Pencil, eraser, dry-erase marker, notebook, graphing calculator. I have in-class set. For at-home, buy one ($60-80) or go to: sites.google.com/site/ti83interactivecalculator Extra help, Tuesdays 3:40-4:40 or by appointment. Retake policy 1 test retake and 3 checkup retakes per term, within 2 weeks of original exam. Give me 2 days notice. Retake grade is new grade, even if lower. Grades 55% Tests, 15% Assignments/Checkups, 15% Projects, 15% Final Course summary (units, tests, important dates), subject to change.

  17. Other stuff (AP) Bathroom Sign up for our AP classroom. Go to myap.collegeboard.org. Use the code: Period 1 Period 3 2VGWGJ A9NVWZ Pass out code Grab a textbook, orange (AP). Say your first & last name to me, and show me the book ID (on the side, written in Sharpie). Mr. Colligan s Statistics Survey (yellow) Do NOT write your name.

  18. Warm Up (go over) 1) Write down 1 example of a categorical variable. 2) Write down 1 example of a quantitative variable. 3) Is a phone number categorical or quantitative?

  19. Make-a-List Desk partners, share 1 whiteboard. Take turns writing down answers Winner = longest list Example: Prime numbers

  20. Make-a-List Desk partners, share 1 whiteboard. Take turns writing down answers Winner = longest list Your topic is Quantitative variables

  21. Make-a-List Desk partners, share 1 whiteboard. Take turns writing down answers Winner = longest list Your topic is Categorical variables 2pts each for categorical variables consisting of numbers

  22. Bar graph A chart with rectangular bars, with lengths proportional to the values they represent. Can be plotted vertically or horizontally. Example, Latane & Darley (1968) 2 confederates 10 9 Alone 8 Number of participants 7 7 6 6 Number of participants 5 5 4 4 3 3 2 2 1 1 0 0 1 min. 2 min. 3 min. 4 min. 5 min. 6 min. No 1 min. 2 min. 3 min. 4 min. 5 min. 6 min. No report report

  23. 1 of 2 We try Let s say you were eligible to vote in the last presidential election. Who would you vote for? Choose the following: Donald Trump Hillary Clinton Darrell Castle Dr. Jill Stein Gary Johnson (Republican Party) (Democratic Party) (Constitution Party) (Green Party) (Libertarian Party)

  24. 2 of 2 You try Whiteboards In August 2005, researchers for the American Society for Microbiology & the Soap and Detergent Association monitored the behavior of more than 6000 users of public restrooms. They observed people in public venues such as Turner Field in Atlanta and Grand Central Station in New York City. 2393 men washed their hands, and 813 men did not wash their hands. 2802 women washed their hands, and 328 women did not wash their hands. 1. Make a bar graph that displays this information. 2. Based on this data, would you rather shake hands with a man or a woman?

  25. Chart 1 of 3 3000 2500 2000 Wash No Wash 1500 1000 500 0 Men Women

  26. Chart 2 of 3 3500 3000 2500 2000 No Wash Wash 1500 1000 500 0 Men Women

  27. Chart 3 of 3 100% 80% 60% No Wash Wash 40% 20% 0% Men Women

  28. Dot Plot A chart of data points plotted on a simple scale, typically using dots. Example: Latane & Darley (GeoGebra) Alone 7 6 Number of participants 5 4 3 2 1 0 1 min. 2 min. 3 min. 4 min. 5 min. 6 min. No report

  29. Whiteboards You try How many states have you visited for at least 24 hours?

  30. Be in your seat when the bell rings. Push in your chair as you leave. Exit Pass (AP) 1. Write down an email address (school or non-school) that you check regularly. 2. Make a bar graph of the class (freshmen, sophomore, junior, senior) of the students in this room. Homework (AP) 1. Read the syllabus thoroughly. 2. Go to the class website (URL on syllabus). Look around. 3. Textbook pg.7 #1, 2, 5 4. Student questionnaire (green) ANONYMOUS Statistics survey (yellow) 6. Sign up for AP classroom. Period 1: 2VGWGJ. Period 3: A9NVWZ

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