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David Voas; Laura Watt – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2025
Binary logistic regression is one of the most widely used statistical tools. The method uses odds, log odds, and odds ratios, which are difficult to understand and interpret. Understanding of logistic regression tends to fall down in one of three ways: (1) Many students and researchers come to believe that an odds ratio translates directly into…
Descriptors: Statistics, Statistics Education, Regression (Statistics), Misconceptions
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Renelle, Amy; Budgett, Stephanie; Jones, Rhys – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2021
Everyone, including teachers, is prone to randomness misconceptions. In this article, we investigate the perceptions of randomness held by New Zealand secondary school teachers. The responses to a question asked in an online, anonymous questionnaire sent to New Zealand teachers will be explored. One question asked participants to create a sequence…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Teachers, Misconceptions, Problem Solving
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Passaretti, Davide; Vistocco, Domenico – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2017
In an informal study, two versions of a story involving probability are introduced to undergraduates. The findings reveal that students have troubles detecting equal probabilities in a sampling scheme without replacement in which no information on earlier draws is available.
Descriptors: Statistics, Mathematics Instruction, Probability, Mathematical Concepts
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Lesser, Lawrence M. – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2018
This literature-based, classroom-tested novel innovation of educational song (with pedagogical scaffolding) may help engage students explore and address common resistant misconceptions in probability (e.g. all outcomes are equally likely) and in statistics (e.g. correlation must imply either causation or coincidence).
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Singing, Statistics, Correlation
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Falk, Ruma; Lann, Avital Lavie – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2015
As the number of independent tosses of a fair coin grows, the rates of heads and tails tend to equality. This is misinterpreted by many students as being true also for the absolute numbers of the two outcomes, which, conversely, depart unboundedly from each other in the process. Eradicating that misconception, as by coin-tossing experiments,…
Descriptors: Probability, Statistics, Misconceptions, Mathematical Concepts
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Groth, Randall E.; Butler, Jaime; Nelson, Delmar – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2016
Students can struggle to understand and use terms that describe probabilities. Such struggles lead to difficulties comprehending classroom conversations. In this article, we describe some specific misunderstandings a group of students (ages 11-12) held in regard to vocabulary such as "certain", "likely" and…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Statistics, Probability, Misconceptions