Math Relearning/Progressions/High School Statistics and Probability

From The Thinkulum
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

These are my comments on the Common Core Math Progressions document Statistics & Probability: High School (PDF).

Overview

"Probability is presented as an essential tool" - Right up my alley. And I'm so glad I'm studying this now, because I somehow missed it in school. I did take a statistics course in college though. It was for psychology majors. It was also at 8 in the morning.

Interpreting categorical and quantitative data

"decide on the median or mean" - I've always wondered this. I probably learned it in college and forgot.

"accounting for possible effects of extreme data points" - I always wonder what to do with these. It sounds like there are ways of dealing with them that are more disciplined than the hand wringing I do. Honestly I feel like I'm guessing half the time I try to do anything meaningful with statistics.

"Perhaps a better (and simpler) model" - Fitting lines to data is a good example of the importance of learning about functions.

"always the possibility of a closer fit" - Does statistical software run through possibilities at least semi-automatically? It should.

Making inferences and justifying conclusions

"repeatedly drawing random samples of size 50" - Very interesting! I wonder if this technique has a name. I imagine there's a way to calculate the findings without actually drawing the samples.

"no extreme data points" - Is there a mathematical way to determine if a data point is extreme, if you can't quite tell by looking?

"re-randomizing" - Another interesting technique.

Conditional probability and the rules of probability

Using probability to make decisions

Where the Statistics and Probability Progression might lead

This is good info for students. I think probability and statistics is one of the most useful areas of math for the general population. So much human knowledge is statistical.

<disqus/>