Syllabus
STA 2023 – Spring 2011 |
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1. Instructional Team: |
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Teaching Assistants: Lab
Schedule and Tutoring Room Hours |
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This course satisfies General Education
Credits in the Mathematical Sciences. Students learn how to summarize data
and how to make appropriate decisions based on data. This course has a
General Education Category of M. Course
Description
I Data – which includes graphical and numerical
summaries to describe the distribution of a variable, or the relationship
between two variables (chapters 1, 2 and 3, approximately 4 weeks), and data
production to learn how to design good surveys and experiments, collect data
from samples that are representative of the whole population, and avoid
common sources of biases (chapter 4, 1 week.) II
Probability and Inference – using the language of probability and the properties of
numerical summaries computed from a random samples (chapters 5 and 6, 3
weeks), we learn to draw conclusions about the population of interest, based
on our random sample, and attach a measure of reliability to them (chapters
7, 8, 9 approximately 8 weeks). Course Objective |
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3. Required Materials |
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NOTE - the HONORS section of STA2023 sometimes uses a
different book. Please double check
the name of the book and the author before purchasing. Lab Workbook ·
Lab Workbook MUST be purchased NEW, and is available alone
or bundled with the textbook. ·
This workbook includes copies of
the lecture notes and all the worksheets for the Lab portion of the
course. ·
Lab Workbook for Statistics: The Art and Science of Learning
from Data by Megan Mocko and Maria Ripol,
2nd edition, Pearson. Textbook
·
Textbook can be
purchased New, Used or as an Ebook. ·
Statistics: The Art and Science of Learning from Data by Alan Agresti and Christine Franklin, 2nd
edition, Pearson, 2009. ISBN
Numbers ·
Lab Workbook ISBN: 0136037356 ·
Textbook ISBN: 0135131995 ·
Ebook ISBN: 0558064620 http://www.pearsoncustom.com/fl/ufl_stat ·
Bundled Text and Lab Workbook ISBN: 0321533372 Scientific Calculator ·
You will need a calculator with some basic statistical
functions: mean and standard deviation. ·
Many inexpensive calculators (around $15) have these
functions; check the manual or look for the following symbols: x-bar and
either s or σn-1. ·
All of the more expensive graphing calculator have them as
well, but it is not necessary to buy one of them for this class. |
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4. Course Website: |
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Announcements: http://www.stat.ufl.edu/~mripol/2023.html
Information
for the course, the online lectures for the first week, and important
announcements will appear on the course website listed above. E-Learning: http://lss.at.ufl.edu/
After
the first week of the semester, everything will move to a password protected
website in E-Learning, an integrated,
Web based classroom management tool. In e-Learning you will be able to: ·
check the Announcement page ·
check the calendar for upcoming quiz, exam or lab dates ·
watch the lectures as streaming video ·
take the online quizzes ·
check your grades |
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5. Lectures |
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Live
Lectures Live
lectures are taught in a large lecture hall that should accommodate everyone
who wants to come. Everyone is welcome
to attend these live lectures, even those who are registered for a Web class.
Lectures will also be taught in a smaller classroom where they will be
videotaped. The videotaped lectures
will be available to view online through the course webpage in e-learning the
same day, before 4pm (usually as soon as the lecture is recorded). No one is
registered for this class, but everyone is welcome to attend. However, this room only seats around 25
students, so come early if you are interested.
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6. Weekly Lab Sessions |
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Students are required to attend Lab once a week, according
to the section for which they are registered. In Lab, groups of around 40
students will meet with a TA to work on a simple, hands-on activity related
to the material being covered in class. All Labs meet in Classroom Building
105, room 220 (CBD 220). This building is located half a block north of
University Avenue, across from Library West. Worksheets with instructions for
each Lab are included in the Lab Workbook. Students must bring these
worksheets to Lab each week. The worksheets must be turned in to the TA
before leaving Lab that day. They will be graded on a scale of 6 points. Lab
Attendance and Policies: ·
Go to the right section. Students must attend
the section they are registered for - you will get no credit for your work if
you attend a different section. ·
Be on time. Students must be on time for Labs, and will
not be allowed to enter if they are more than five minutes late. Late
students would disrupt the activity, and create problems for the rest of the
students and the TA, so it will not be tolerated. ·
Be prepared. Students must come prepared to Lab, having
watched the lectures that cover material relevant to the Lab's activity. ·
Bring the Worksheet. Students must bring the Lab Worksheet
to Lab with them - you will get no credit for hand written labs. ·
No Makeups. Students will not be permitted to make up any
Labs that they have missed, regardless of the reason. Instead, we will drop
the lowest three grades for all labs and quizzes combined. NOTE: If you are registered
for a lab section that conflicts with another class, or with several night
assembly exams for other classes, you MUST CHANGE LAB SECTIONS IMMEDIATELY.
STA 2023 Labs will never meet on the days we have an exam. There are usually
plenty of opportunities to change sections during Drop/Add period. After
Drop/Add is over, you will need to contact the Lab Coordinator to see if any
changes are possible - see the top of this Handbook for the Lab Coordinator's
contact information. |
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7. Weekly Online Quizzes |
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·
When? We will have online quizzes every week, unless there are
exams or holidays. The quizzes are available online, through e-Learning, over
a period of several days – the exact details will be announced in class. ·
Where? You can do the quizzes from any computer that has
internet access. ·
Material. These quizzes will cover the material taught
in class the previous week, and are designed primarily to encourage you to
keep up with the lectures, particularly if you choose to watch them on the
web at your own pace. ·
Three tries. You will be allowed three attempts for each
quiz – each randomly generated, so the questions won't be identical. The
highest grade will be recorded. ·
Getting help. You are allowed to ask the TA's and the
instructor questions about submitted attempts on the quiz only. For
example, you can take the quiz one time, submit the quiz for grading, and
then print out the quiz. You can then bring this printout with you to the
tutoring room, where the TA's can help understand what you did wrong. You can
then go and try attempt 2 on your own. ·
No makeups. There will be no makeup quizzes for any
reason. Instead, we will drop the lowest three grades for all labs and
quizzes combined. ·
Do well. Given all these opportunities, all students
should do extremely well on the quizzes. Hopefully they will serve the
purpose of improving your grade in the class, as well as be an important tool
in learning the material for the course. You can also print your quizzes and
use them to study for exams. ·
Problems? Pop-ups. If you click on the
quiz and nothing happens, you need to allow pop-ups for this website.
Firewalls may also interfere with the quizzes. Computer crashes in the middle of the
quiz or electricity goes out? Restart the computer and log in again into
e-Learning – it should let you continue the quiz. If for some reason, the
system does not let you back into the quiz, email the instructor at mripol@stat.ufl.edu. Time Expired. If e-Learning gives
you nasty messages about your time being expired, ignore them, finish the
quiz and submit it. Technical
Problems. If
you have technical problems with e-Learning, contact the CIRCA help desk at
392-HELP. If you are having trouble with the quizzes from your computer at
home, and the quiz is about to close, the easiest thing to do is try from
another computer. |
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8. Exams |
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·
Three Exams. There will be three assembly exams, each
worth 100 points. The two midterms are given at night, and the last one
during final exam week. ·
Multiple Choice. Each exam consists of
33 multiple choice questions, each worth 3 points a piece. This will total 99
points. ·
Personal Information. You can earn the remaining 1 point by
bringing a picture ID to the exam and by bubbling in your name, UF ID# and
test code (listed on the front page of the exam) correctly. ·
Material. Exams will cover a larger amount of material
that the quizzes and will also place more emphasis in the understanding of
concepts and ideas behind the formulas. ·
Room assignments for each exam will be announced in class and
on the website. The class will be divided up by sections. ·
Bring to the exam your UFID number, a picture ID, no.2
pencils and eraser for completing the bubble sheets, and a scientific
calculator. ·
Graphing calculators may be used during the exam, but only
for programs native to the calculator when you purchased it. Notes for the
course and formulas for the course should not be typed into your calculator.
Accessing notes and formulas from the course on your calculator during the
exam is cheating. ·
Academic dishonesty on any exam will result in a minimum penalty
of a grade of zero on that exam.
Makeup Exam Policy ·
In case of conflict with a class: You must attend the
regular exam. Assembly exams have priority over regularly scheduled
classes. The instructor for the other class must allow you to make up any
work you miss because of an assembly exam - contact them early to make
arrangements. This is a University of Florida policy, as stated on the
Registrar's website http://www.registrar.ufl.edu/currents/finalexams.html . ·
In case of conflict with another exam: You must attend the
regular exam unless the other exam is also an assembly exam, and the course
number is higher than 2023. Assembly exams have priority over
time-of-class exams. If you have two assembly exams scheduled for the same
day and time, the course with the higher number has priority. This is a
University of Florida policy, as stated on the Registrar's website. If you
need to schedule a makeup, contact the instructor through email, in person
during office hours, or through the phone (information appears at the top of
this page). Makeup arrangements must be made at least ONE WEEK prior
to the regularly scheduled exam. ·
In case of sudden illness or emergency: Contact the instructor
as soon as you realize you will be unable to take the test at the scheduled
time. Each case will be reviewed individually. Valid and detailed
documentation is a prerequisite for scheduling a makeup exam under such
extenuating circumstances. The instructor must be contacted PRIOR to
the time of the regularly scheduled exam. ·
Format of Makeup Exams will not necessarily be multiple choice although it will cover the same material as the
regular exam. ·
Travel Plans. Traveling, in general, is not a valid reason
to request a makeup exam. Do not buy plane tickets assuming the instructor
will then have to make other arrangements for your exam. |
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9. Lecture Notes |
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The
notes in the Lab Workbook will be used in class. When you are following the
lectures, whether live or on the web, you should always have the lecture
notes in front of you. The instructor will go over the definitions and
theory, and work out the examples on the spaces provided. |
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10. Homework
and Practice Questions |
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·
Suggested Homework Problems from the text, by section,
can be found on the course webpage in e-Learning. These problems are assigned
to help you master the material and will not be collected. You can get help
with these problems from the tutors in the Tutoring Room. Doing the homework
is essential step in succeeding in this class. ·
Answers to odd numbered homework problems are
available in the back of the text. Answers to all of the problems are
available in the Instructor's Guide – copies of this are available in
the Tutoring Room, and on reserve at Marston Science Library. |
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11. Minitab Statistical
Computing Package |
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Minitab is a very easy to use and powerful statistical
computing package. ·
We will use Minitab in several of our Labs - the teaching
assistant will give you directions on how to use it. ·
You can also use Minitab to solve some of the homework
problems assigned from the book. The data sets for most homework problems are
included in the data disk that comes with the textbook. ·
Minitab is available at all the PC
CIRCA Labs on campus. ·
You can also buy it for your home computer (or download
the demo version - free for 30 days) at the Minitab website at www.minitab.com, or rent a copy of the software for a
semester at www.e-academy.com/minitab.
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12. Tutoring Room |
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The TA's for the class will be available to
answer questions about the material covered in class, homework problems, etc,
in the Tutoring Room located in Griffin Floyd 104. It will be open over 30
hours a week. There is no need to make an appointment, just go whenever it is
convenient for you and the TA on duty will help answer your questions.
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Grade Structure:
Grading Scale:
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14. Course Policies |
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·
Privacy Policies: Student records are confidential. Only
information designated “UF directory information” may be released without
your written consent. UF views each student as the primary contact for all
communication. If your parents contact me about your grade, attendance or
other information that is not “UF directory information”. I will ask them to
contact you. ·
Email: Email relating to information about the class
should be sent to your TA (see email addresses on first section of this
syllabus) or to the instructor at mripol@stat.ufl.edu. Your message will be
answered within two working days, in most cases. However, we ask you to
please refer to this Syllabus, the Announcement Page and the course website
to try to find the answers for yourself. Questions regarding the material
covered in class, homework problems, or Lab should be asked in person, in the
Tutoring Room, in Lab or in class. Statistical questions often require
formulas or pictures, which can make it very hard to communicate by email.
Emails should include your full name, and section number. If you are
referring to a quiz, refer to it by quiz number, attempt number and question
number. ·
Instructor's Honor Code: We the members of the
University of Florida community pledge to hold ourselves and our peers to the
highest standards of honesty and integrity. ·
Academic Dishonesty: We adhere to the University of Florida
rules and guidelines for handling instances of academic dishonesty. Please
refer to the Office for Student Services for detailed information about the
current policies. ·
Students with Disabilities: Students who require
special accommodations in class or during exams should follow the procedures
outlined by the Disability Resources Program (http://www.dso.ufl.edu/drc/ ) Please
bring the course coordinator your letter of accommodations in the first two
weeks of classes, during office hours, or make an appointment if you cannot
make it during those hours. This letter must be discussed with the course
coordinator directly, not with the lab TA, for accommodations on exams to be
made. ·
Class Attendance and Behavior: Attendance to class is
not mandatory, since you will be able to watch the lectures online.
Attendance to Lab, however, is mandatory, and you are required to attend the
Lab section for which you are registered. For both Labs and lectures, we ask
that you arrive on time, and to behave in a respectful manner towards the
instructors and your fellow students. In fact, no one will be allowed in Lab
if they are more than five minutes late. Please turn your off cellular phones
and refrain from eating, drinking, reading newspapers, doing homework for
other classes, and excessive talking. ·
Makeup Quizzes and Labs: There will be NO
makeup labs or quizzes under any circumstances - instead, we will drop the
lowest three grades for all labs and quizzes combined. These three drops are
meant to allow for missed labs or quizzes due to illness, personal or family
emergency, personal or University sanctioned travel, religious observance,
tardiness, laziness, and all other reasons. Do not abuse your drops - you
never know if you will need them later. ·
Makeup Exams: See the section on Exams for exam makeup
policy. ·
Grading: Grades will be changed only when an error has
been made; negotiation is not appropriate. ·
Incompletes are only assigned when extraordinary
circumstances (such as an accident, or extended hospitalization), arising
after the date for dropping the course, prevent the student from completing
the course requirements. Having a failing grade in the course is not a valid
reason for requesting an Incomplete. |
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15. Where to Get Help for this course: |
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in class, from your instructor ·
in Lab, from your TA ·
in the Tutoring Room, Griffin Floyd 104 ·
for many classes, not just statistics, at the
Tutoring Lab in the Basement of Broward Hall - a schedule of their hours can
be obtained by calling 392-2010 or by accessing www.teachingcenter.ufl.edu.
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as a last resort, by getting (and paying) a
private tutor. A list of private tutors can be obtained from the Statistics
Department secretary in Griffin-Floyd 103. |
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16. How to do well in the course: |
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·
Keep up with the lectures, either by attending a live
class or watching them online. ·
Keep up with the course announcements. ·
Attend Lab regularly, and on time. ·
Take the online quizzes early, and use all the attempts
necessary to get a good grade on them. ·
Do well on the Labs and quizzes, and complete them on
time. That is the easiest way to improve your grade. ·
Work out the suggested homework problems regularly, soon
after the material is covered in lecture. Check your answers at the Martsten Science Library or with the TA’s in the Tutoring
Room. ·
Visit the Tutoring Room regularly to get help from the
TA’s. Their job is to clarify any questions that you may have, and to help
you understand the material and learn to do the problems. ·
Get to know other students in the class and get together
regularly to work on homework problems, and to study for quizzes and exams. ·
Prepare carefully for exams by going over the lectures,
doing your homework and practice questions, studying your quizzes and reading
the book. Pay special attention to the understanding of concepts and ideas
behind the formulas. ·
If you are having trouble with the class, talk to the
instructor in person, early on, to get suggestions on how to do better. Do
not wait until the last week to bring any problems to the instructor's
attention. |