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Wulff, Shaun S.; Robinson, Timothy J. – Journal of Statistics Education, 2014
Bayesian methodology continues to be widely used in statistical applications. As a result, it is increasingly important to introduce students to Bayesian thinking at early stages in their mathematics and statistics education. While many students in upper level probability courses can recite the differences in the Frequentist and Bayesian…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Probability, College Mathematics, Mathematics Instruction
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Griffiths, Martin – Teaching Mathematics and Its Applications: An International Journal of the IMA, 2013
Some mathematical activities and investigations for the classroom or the lecture theatre can appear rather contrived. This cannot, however, be levelled at the idea given here, since it is based on a perfectly sensible question concerning distributional approximations that was posed by an undergraduate student. Out of this simple question, and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Teaching Methods
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O'Hara, Michael E. – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
Although the concept of the sampling distribution is at the core of much of what we do in econometrics, it is a concept that is often difficult for students to grasp. The thought process behind bootstrapping provides a way for students to conceptualize the sampling distribution in a way that is intuitive and visual. However, teaching students to…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Economics, Sampling, Statistical Inference
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Turocy, Theodore L. – Journal of Economic Education, 2009
The author describes a protocol for classroom experiments for courses that introduce undergraduates to signaling games. Signaling games are conceptually difficult because, when analyzing the game, students are not naturally inclined to think in probabilistic, Bayesian terms. The experimental design explicitly presents the posterior frequencies of…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Experiments, Games, Undergraduate Study