We invited a number of prominent statisticians and statistics educators to glimpse into the future to discuss what they see as the significant challenges to the established statistics curriculum that enculturate students into statistical practices that underpin the activity of statisticians. Peng, Kreuter, and Gould discuss various developments, which are already gaining traction in current society and will support the notion of immersion in a data-rich curriculum. The influence of MOOCs, “big data,” and Bayesian approaches is primarily discussed by these writers in relation to an undergraduate curriculum. Pruim raises some key questions about teaching computation in statistics with a particular emphasis on undergraduates and programming. I...
The demands for a statistically literate society are increasing, and the introductory statistics cou...
University courses in elementary statistics are usually taught from a frequentist perspective. In th...
An intense debate about Harvard University’s General Education Curriculum demonstrates that statisti...
We invited a number of prominent statisticians and statistics educators to glimpse into the future t...
In the second set of reflective writings (the first set appears in Chap. 13), another group of promi...
<p>The last half-dozen years have seen <i>The American Statistician</i> publish well-argued and prov...
Carranza & Kuzniak (2008) have analysed the negative impact of reducing probability to a purely ...
Research in statistics education is an emerging field, with much of the work being published in dive...
No one will debate the fact that quantitative information is everywhere and numerical data are incre...
The use of simulation-based methods for introducing inferen-ce is growing in popularity for the Stat...
As we begin the 21st century, the introductory statistics course appears healthy, with its emphasis ...
Statistics educators have been trying to improve undergraduate statistics instruction for decades. S...
Technology continues to change not only how we teach, but also what we teach in the introductory cou...
[EN] The reproducibility crisis in science has launched global discussion about the need to restruct...
The teaching of statistics has evolved more slowly than statistical practice. In diagnosing the prob...
The demands for a statistically literate society are increasing, and the introductory statistics cou...
University courses in elementary statistics are usually taught from a frequentist perspective. In th...
An intense debate about Harvard University’s General Education Curriculum demonstrates that statisti...
We invited a number of prominent statisticians and statistics educators to glimpse into the future t...
In the second set of reflective writings (the first set appears in Chap. 13), another group of promi...
<p>The last half-dozen years have seen <i>The American Statistician</i> publish well-argued and prov...
Carranza & Kuzniak (2008) have analysed the negative impact of reducing probability to a purely ...
Research in statistics education is an emerging field, with much of the work being published in dive...
No one will debate the fact that quantitative information is everywhere and numerical data are incre...
The use of simulation-based methods for introducing inferen-ce is growing in popularity for the Stat...
As we begin the 21st century, the introductory statistics course appears healthy, with its emphasis ...
Statistics educators have been trying to improve undergraduate statistics instruction for decades. S...
Technology continues to change not only how we teach, but also what we teach in the introductory cou...
[EN] The reproducibility crisis in science has launched global discussion about the need to restruct...
The teaching of statistics has evolved more slowly than statistical practice. In diagnosing the prob...
The demands for a statistically literate society are increasing, and the introductory statistics cou...
University courses in elementary statistics are usually taught from a frequentist perspective. In th...
An intense debate about Harvard University’s General Education Curriculum demonstrates that statisti...