Enhancing Student Project Experiences in Introductory Statistics

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Explore strategies such as ice breakers, popcorn popping technique, semester project assignments, and timeline planning to improve student engagement and learning outcomes in introductory statistics courses, shared by experienced educators. Learn about creating a supportive community, scaffolded project design, and effective assessment techniques.


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  1. Our Experiences with Recent Student Projects in Introductory Statistics: Struggles, Solutions, and Successes Karen Kinard - Tallahassee Community College Ambika and Dustin Silva - College of the Canyons May 19, 2017 USCOTS kinardk@tcc.fl.edu ambika.silva@canyons.edu dustin.silva@canyons.edu

  2. Creating Community Having ice breakers helps create a learning environment that makes students comfortable in our classrooms. And It also helps students find like minded peers! This is great for group dynamics (if you allow them to make their own groups)

  3. Popcorn Popping: Popcorn is a simple opening or closure activity by which teachers can objectively analyze the quantity and quality of the students' comprehension of the lesson. Though it does not allow for individual assessment, the popcorn technique is a great way to identify the presence of gaps in understanding. Finish the following statement: If I weren t a professor, I would be a ...

  4. Kinards Hybrid Class Semester Project Assignments Preparation: Day 1 Writing Assignment about Goals/Direction/Major Team Formation: In-class Mixer after Introductions 1. Team Working Agreement Assignment 10% 2. Potential Topics Assignment 10% 3. Written Proposal 30% 4. Written Final Report/Oral Presentations in class 50%

  5. Timeline of Semester Length Project: (SILVA) When we do . Sampling methods Assign for the Project Project Proposal: Tell instructor how they plan on gathering data, and what survey/data they plan on collecting Data Collection Submit Data to instructor Rubric for Project Rough Draft of PART of the project (so instructor can make sure they re on the right track Material (depending on what type of project you re doing) Peer Review Have students check each other for accuracy/rubric, give students 20 minutes to make last minute changes Variations: give chances during presentation to answer questions they didn t cover, or fix mistakes from Peer Review

  6. Common Advice: Scaffolding a Project is essential! Students don t feel as stressed over their project Students learn to stay on track, keep deadlines Students are reassured their plan will address their project questions

  7. Find a Poster! Gather the post it Notes: Summarize what everyone is saying Nominate a speaker to give us a 1 -2 minute Summary

  8. What are Kinards Students doing their project on? 1. Is the TCC Career Center Effective? 2. Political News Information Gathering Habits Fact-checking /TCC Students Voting Preparation for the 2016 Presidential Election 3. College Food Trends: Where TCC Students Eat Lunch: On or Off- Campus? 4. Who Drives to TCC? Satisfied with Parking? 5. Time Shoppers Spend at the mall and Number of Visits Per Month 6. Gas Buddy Study Comparing Costs across 5 States

  9. Spring 2017 Topics 1. Time Management of TCC Healthcare Students 2. Demographics of Tallahassee voters in the 2016 Presidential Election 3. Shopping Preferences: Online or In-Store? 4. What are TCC Students Driving? 5. TCC Students Going Clubbing: where, transportation, $ spent, # in party 6. A Weekend at the Mall: A Demographic Study 7. Marpan dumpsters: Size, type, and number by Zipcode 8. Smoking habits of TCC Students 9. Gender conformity? An observational study of passersby given a directional sign

  10. Yes, students like to choose sleep, work hours , and other boring topics, but they also have done .

  11. Concerns and Questions: (And possible answers!)

  12. Suggestions and Sustainability 1. Consider doing this project in a flipped class format so there is more class time together for me to work with project teams. 2. Consider doing several mini-projects instead of one large one in Hybrid. 3. Have the flipped class meet in a computer classroom so we can practice proper data input format, graph choices, and numerical analyses together using the Minitab statistics software we have on campus. 4. Provide more course content on the sampling and measurement processes. Our current text is sorely lacking in these areas. 5. Provide examples of previous projects. All teams from Fall semester gave me their written permission to do so. Most from Spring did also. 6. Provide coaching on making oral presentations. Rehearsal/peer review 7. Examine the amount of text homework that is assigned online. Align it toward project tasks.

  13. Addressing Questions / Concerns Finding Data vs. Gathering Data Is it worth sacrificing random samples for gathering data? Group Grading: How to deal with it? Group grading rubric : Grade each other, give percentages Individual accountability

  14. Undergraduate Statistics Project Competition USPROC - https://www.causeweb.org/usproc/USCLAP%20 Competition USPROC is a joint effort of the American Statistical Association and the Consortium for Advancement of Undergraduate Statistics Education Next submission deadline: June 30, 2017 (for winter/spring courses/projects, and year long projects)

  15. Thank you If you would like any of my project or presentation files, see me afterwards to copy from my thumb drive.

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