Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Communicating the value of statistical thinking...
View graph of relations

Communicating the value of statistical thinking in research

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

Communicating the value of statistical thinking in research. / Lancaster, Gillian.
ICOTS 8 proceedings: International Conference on Teaching Statistics 2010 Ljubljana, Slovenia. ed. / Chris Reading. Auckland, New Zealand: International Association for Statistical Education, 2010.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Lancaster, G 2010, Communicating the value of statistical thinking in research. in C Reading (ed.), ICOTS 8 proceedings: International Conference on Teaching Statistics 2010 Ljubljana, Slovenia. International Association for Statistical Education, Auckland, New Zealand. <http://www.stat.auckland.ac.nz/~iase/publications/icots8/ICOTS8_6C4_LANCASTER.pdf>

APA

Lancaster, G. (2010). Communicating the value of statistical thinking in research. In C. Reading (Ed.), ICOTS 8 proceedings: International Conference on Teaching Statistics 2010 Ljubljana, Slovenia International Association for Statistical Education. http://www.stat.auckland.ac.nz/~iase/publications/icots8/ICOTS8_6C4_LANCASTER.pdf

Vancouver

Lancaster G. Communicating the value of statistical thinking in research. In Reading C, editor, ICOTS 8 proceedings: International Conference on Teaching Statistics 2010 Ljubljana, Slovenia. Auckland, New Zealand: International Association for Statistical Education. 2010

Author

Lancaster, Gillian. / Communicating the value of statistical thinking in research. ICOTS 8 proceedings: International Conference on Teaching Statistics 2010 Ljubljana, Slovenia. editor / Chris Reading. Auckland, New Zealand : International Association for Statistical Education, 2010.

Bibtex

@inproceedings{9ff6d2de12e1492093eefb3a86b3b221,
title = "Communicating the value of statistical thinking in research",
abstract = "In recent years much attention has been given to statistical literacy and to stimulating interest in statistical thinking and statistical reasoning. Statistical thinking is important for understanding the world around us and is in all but recognition the cornerstone of evidence-based research. Statistical reasoning is motivated by real-world problems, which in turn promote the use and development of statistical methods of enquiry. It is well known that many researchers from other disciplines find statistics challenging, and some do not appreciate the relevance of statistical enquiry. This paper gives examples of some of the teaching strategies that have been applied within the Lancaster Postgraduate Statistics Centre when teaching students from a range of disciplines and short courses for social and health scientists. Issues concerning course structure and methods of teaching will be discussed and several experimental innovations highlighted.",
author = "Gillian Lancaster",
year = "2010",
month = jul,
language = "English",
editor = "Chris Reading",
booktitle = "ICOTS 8 proceedings",
publisher = "International Association for Statistical Education",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Communicating the value of statistical thinking in research

AU - Lancaster, Gillian

PY - 2010/7

Y1 - 2010/7

N2 - In recent years much attention has been given to statistical literacy and to stimulating interest in statistical thinking and statistical reasoning. Statistical thinking is important for understanding the world around us and is in all but recognition the cornerstone of evidence-based research. Statistical reasoning is motivated by real-world problems, which in turn promote the use and development of statistical methods of enquiry. It is well known that many researchers from other disciplines find statistics challenging, and some do not appreciate the relevance of statistical enquiry. This paper gives examples of some of the teaching strategies that have been applied within the Lancaster Postgraduate Statistics Centre when teaching students from a range of disciplines and short courses for social and health scientists. Issues concerning course structure and methods of teaching will be discussed and several experimental innovations highlighted.

AB - In recent years much attention has been given to statistical literacy and to stimulating interest in statistical thinking and statistical reasoning. Statistical thinking is important for understanding the world around us and is in all but recognition the cornerstone of evidence-based research. Statistical reasoning is motivated by real-world problems, which in turn promote the use and development of statistical methods of enquiry. It is well known that many researchers from other disciplines find statistics challenging, and some do not appreciate the relevance of statistical enquiry. This paper gives examples of some of the teaching strategies that have been applied within the Lancaster Postgraduate Statistics Centre when teaching students from a range of disciplines and short courses for social and health scientists. Issues concerning course structure and methods of teaching will be discussed and several experimental innovations highlighted.

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

BT - ICOTS 8 proceedings

A2 - Reading, Chris

PB - International Association for Statistical Education

CY - Auckland, New Zealand

ER -