Teaching
Statistics with GAISE (including an example of statistical literacy)
GAISE is the
acronym for Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education
and is the product of a report issued through the American Statistical
Association. More detailed information can be found at the AmStat website http://www.amstat.org/education/gaise/GAISECollege.htm
The report contains six recommendations for an introductory statistics course:
1.
Emphasize
statistical literacy and develop statistical thinking.
2.
Use real
data.
3.
Stress
conceptual understanding rather than mere knowledge of procedures.
4.
Foster
active learning in the classroom.
5.
Use
technology for developing concepts and analyzing data.
6. Use assessments to improve and evaluate
student learning.
Using these six guidelines will
help us structure our statistics courses to enable our students to become
statistically literate. For example, students should believe and understand why
random sampling allows results of surveys and experiments to be
extended to the population from which the sample was taken. They should also
appreciate that random assignment
in comparative experiments allows cause and effect conclusions to be drawn, but
that, in general, association is not causation.
An understanding of this last fact
would have helped the writer in last Sunday’s Virginian-Pilot (“Model
troubled U.S.
schools on Israeli kibbutz”, February 6, 2006, page J3) avoid some statistical
mis-steps and make a stronger case for his proposal. The author has data that
show that “although kibbutzim comprise only 5% of the Israeli population,
surprisingly large numbers of kibbutzniks become teachers, lawyers, doctors,
and political leaders… 75% of Israeli air force pilots … came from the kibbutz
movement.” Based on this information, the author believes we should create a
system of child development centers to provide the same support to our children
that the Israeli children receive while their parents are working. His
conclusion is that this will cause our children to perform better when they
enter school “ready to learn”. There is definitely an association between
growing up in a kibbutz and becoming an adult with a successful career. But
does being in the kibbutz cause the children to aspire to academic and
professional success? Or are there confounding or lurking variables at work?
Variables such as stability of home life or parents’ attitude about their
children’s success need to be considered. Did anyone ask if being in the highly
charged atmosphere of kibbutz life motivated the children to turn toward
service or government careers? Perhaps kibbutz life removes possible
distractions to academic success, distractions which children in our society
would still face. A child’s participation in a day care center is not the only
factor determining his or her success in school. Daycare participation can be
important but does not necessarily cause a child to do well in school. Could
your students read this article and ask some of these same questions?
If you want to go further with
discussions of these guidelines, consider attending one of the presentations
about them at the VMATYC conference this Spring.
Judy
Williams, TCC
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