1 / 39

Statistics (and SoTL Projects)

Statistics (and SoTL Projects). It’s as much who you know, as what you know! . “Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics” A Case Study in Statistics Use of a Stats Analytical Framework Statistics 101 Some Basics Which Statistical Test Should You Use in Your SoTL Work? Some Examples .

fala
Download Presentation

Statistics (and SoTL Projects)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Statistics (and SoTL Projects) It’s as much who you know, as what you know! • “Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics” • A Case Study in Statistics • Use of a Stats Analytical Framework • Statistics 101 • Some Basics • Which Statistical Test Should You Use in Your SoTL Work? • Some Examples Jim Smith Michigan State University Lyman Briggs College

  2. Learning Goals • By the end of this session, scholars will (have): • Understand the need for and the role(s) of statistical tests in science education research; • Be able to explain some basic tenets of statistics; • Explored some literature examples of the application of statistics to SoTL work; and • Begin to formulate a statistical framework for their Biology Scholars research project.

  3. Statistics and SoTL Projects • Did student learning increase as a result of my cell model assignment? • Do representations in comic book form improve student understanding of photosynthetic processes? • Are there differences in the preparedness and motivation levels of students who W/D/F in Introductory Biology? • Does increased metacognition decrease the W/D/F rate in Introductory Biology? Statistics are important components of strategies to answer these questions!

  4. With respect to Statistics: • Where would you place yourself on the following scale? • From my perspective, there’s “Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics” • I agree with the above statement somewhat, but not strongly. • I am halfway between “Damned Lies” and “Comfort”. • I agree with the below statement, but not strongly. • I am completely comfortable with statistics as they apply to SoTL work.

  5. The Problem – Young and Fry (2008) • “While the results are reported to be statistically significant, I am not familiar enough with the Spearman’s Rho nonparametric correlation analysis to know whether the data are truly convincing. ” • ASM Bio Scholar Summer 2012

  6. Young and Fry (2008)

  7. Framework for Analysis of Statistical Inference Identify Variables of Interest Design Sampling Strategy Collect Raw Data Perform Statistical Test(s) Formulate Hypotheses      • Tasks • Identify the appropriate elements in the article of interest and map them onto the boxes • Decide if the statistical test was appropriately chosen and carried out • Decide if the claims (inferences) are supportable at each level • Tie the framework to your project Inference (Level 1)  Inference (Level 2+) Smith, Valles & Zeleke, in prep.

  8. An Application – Young and Fry (2008) • What is the MAI, and how was it used to measure aspects of metacognition?

  9. An Application – Young and Fry (2008) • What is the difference between metacognitive knowledge and metacognitive regulation?

  10. Framework for Analysis of Statistical Inference Identify Variables of Interest Design Sampling Strategy Collect Raw Data Perform Statistical Test(s) Formulate Hypotheses      • Tasks • Identify the appropriate elements in the article of interest and map them onto the boxes • Decide if the statistical test was appropriately chosen and carried out • Decide if the claims (inferences) are supportable at each level • Tie the framework to your project Inference (Level 1)  Inference (Level 2+) Smith, Valles & Zeleke, in prep.

  11. ASM BSP S12: STATS 101 What do I really need to know about Statistics?

  12. ASM BSP S12: STATS 101 What do I really need to know about Statistics? If you are going to do SoTL research, you really do need a basic working knowledge of statistical inference

  13. Fun, but no help for today

  14. Extremely helpful!

  15. What the difference between: • Experimental (or Research) Hypothesis and • Statistical Hypothesis

  16. What the difference between: • Experimental (or Research) Hypothesis HA: Metacognition improves student learning and • Statistical Hypothesis

  17. What the difference between: • Experimental (or Research) Hypothesis and • Statistical Hypothesis • HA: Course grade is correlated with MAI total

  18. What the difference between: • Experimental (or Research) Hypothesis and • Statistical Hypothesis • H0: No correlation of Course grade with MAI total

  19. The Problem – Young and Fry (2008) • The data allow us to reject the hypothesis that there is no correlation between Course Grade and MAI total. What is the difference between significance level and effect size?

  20. What the difference between: • Experimental (or Research) Hypothesis HA: Metacognition improves student learning and • Statistical Hypothesis

  21. What the difference between: • Discrete Numbers and • Continuous Numbers

  22. With respect to Statistics: • Where would you place yourself on the following scale? • From my perspective, there’s “Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics” • I agree with the above statement somewhat, but not strongly. • I am halfway between “Damned Lies” and “Comfort”. • I agree with the below statement, but not strongly. • I am completely comfortable with statistics as they apply to SoTL work.

  23. What the difference between: • Discrete Numbers Categorical; membership known without error and • Continuous Numbers

  24. What the difference between: • Discrete Numbers and • Continuous Numbers Not known without error; have a distribution

  25. Overall: Mean = 74.70 (74.70%) +/- 11.45 SD TH: Mean = 24.47 (81.57%) +/- 3.91 SD ER: Mean = 28.96 (72.40%) +/- 5.52 SD MC: Mean = 21.27 (70.90%) +/- 4.45 SD Discrete or Continuous?

  26. What the difference between: • Non-parametric Statistics For discrete data; for data that violate parametric assumptions and • Parametric Statistics

  27. What the difference between: • Non-parametric Statistics e.g., Chi-squared tests, Mann-Whitney U test, Wilcoxon Rank Sums test and • Parametric Statistics

  28. What the difference between: • Non-parametric Statistics and • Parametric Statistics

  29. What the difference between: • Non-parametric Statistics and • Parametric Statistics e.g., t-test, ANOVA, Pearson’s r

  30. Assumptions of Parametric Statistics(for continuous data) • Observations are unbiased and independent • Data are normally distributed • Equal variances across groups

  31. Statistical Decision Tree From: Robert Gerwien, “A Painless Guide to Statistics: Online Resources for Biology”, http://abacus.bates.edu/~ganderso/biology/resources/statistics.html

  32. Young and Fry: Revisited Was the use of Spearman’s Rank Correlation test appropriate? Work with your group Yes/No, and why Statistical Decision Tree

  33. Young and Fry: Was theirs the appropriate statistical test? REM - You will find disagreement in the ranks (including among manuscript reviewers)

  34. Test Time: What kind of data? Test? • Encouragingly, using t test analysis, we found that in four of our courses (both BSCI 223 courses, BSCI 424, and BSCI 422) there was significant improvement on the concept inventory scores from presurvey to postsurvey. From Marbach-Ad et al. 2009

  35. Test Time: What kind of data? Test? From Drew & Triplett 2008

  36. Test Time: What kind of data? Test? From Steck et al. 2012

  37. Test Time: What kind of data? Test? From Steck et al. 2012

  38. Test Time: What kind of data? Test? “I’m baffled…” From Steck et al. 2012

  39. You may (probably) need help!! • Become friends/colleagues with a really smart biologist or social scientist who uses a statistical approach in their own work • A lot of these folks have strong experimental design skills • Ecologists and Evolutionary Biologists seem to be particularly strong • On-campus statistical consulting service?

More Related