Today' New York Times education column is the following appreciation of
the importance of statistics in primary and secondary math education.  
Teachers, post it in your math department offices!
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Statistics, a Tool for Life, Is Getting Short Shrift
November 28, 2001 
By RICHARD ROTHSTEIN

BOGART, Ga. -- Many educators want all high school seniors prepared for
calculus. That means taking algebra in the eighth grade and covering
geometry, intermediate algebra and trigonometry by the junior year. This
leaves too little room for study of statistics and probability.

Yet students need grounding in data analysis. The push for universal
calculus has relied on a false belief that colleges and future jobs would
demand it. Yet while calculus is important for college students who major
in science and for the scientific literacy of others, only a few jobs,
mostly in technical fields, actually use it.

Nationwide, educators who recognize this imbalance are trying to get more
statistics into the math curriculum.

One place this is happening is Malcom Bridge Middle School, about 60
miles east of Atlanta. There, Jamie Parker recently taught seventh
graders to make graphs called scatterplots in which an X depicted the
relationship between two aspects of body size the students had measured.
The graphs showed each student's wrist and ankle circumference, or height
and arm span, or length of pointer finger and longest toe.

Mrs. Parker showed the 12-year- olds how someone (at a newspaper, for
example) could report data accurately but display them deceptively - for
example, by changing the scale on one side of a graph to make an apparent
correlation seem less important.

Meanwhile, down the road at Oconee County High School, Steven Messig's
advanced placement statistics class used a list of random numbers to
select five students from each of 20 math and science classes. The 100
subjects came to Mr.  Messig's room for a double-blind taste test of
Pepsi and Coke. Two students poured drinks in random order. Others gave
out cups, not knowing in which order they did so and then recording the
taste each subject preferred.

Wouldn't it have been easier to test a few complete classes rather than
randomly select from many? Kelly Blount, a senior, explained that
socially similar students might take the same classes, so each room might
not be representative.  For example, Kelly explained, students from
wealthier families tend to value education more and might take more
difficult classes. If those people also tend to have common tastes in
what they drink, preferences of students in some rooms might differ from
those of students chosen randomly.

Later, as these students analyze their data, Kelly may learn to say a
"convenience sample" could be "biased" if drawn from a homogeneous
subgroup. Students may be able to explain their "confidence" in the
generalizability of results from a sample of the school's 1,800 students
- what the "interval," or range of results, might be if other groups were
randomly selected. Using computers and graphing calculators, Mr. Messig's
students will design several ways to display their findings.

In 2006, when Mrs. Parker's seventh graders are ready for an advanced
placement class in statistics, they could already know much of this
math.  This knowledge will be important because common debates about
health, justice, economic and legal policy all assume familiarity with
statistics. It is no longer possible to serve competently on some juries
without more data skills than most college graduates have.

Clifford Konold, a professor at the University of Massachusetts, counted
data displays in The New York Times.  Dr. Konold found that in 1972 there
were four graphs or tables in 10 consecutive weekday editions of The
Times, excluding the sports and business sections. There were 8 in 1982
and 44 in 1992. Next year, he could find more than 100.

Interpreting these requires not only different skills from conventional
mathematics, but a different way of thinking.  Geometry and calculus
concern proof. Statistics describe uncertainty. This change in
orientation makes it hard to expand statistics instruction. Math teachers
often resist placing it in the regular course of study because, despite
having math degrees, they do not know how to teach statistics. Parents
and counselors also balk, wanting no time taken from calculus.

Mr. Messig's elective statistics course this year enrolled only nine
students. Because their statistical backgrounds are weak, Mr. Messig is
taking twice the typical time to cover the material.

But his students never benefited from Mrs. Parker's middle school
instruction. Her math class includes data analysis because the State of
Georgia, influenced by standards of the National Council of Teachers of
Mathematics, now tests if seventh graders are learning it. Mrs. Parker's
textbook this year includes more statistics than the old one.

If the trend continues nationwide, this newspaper could someday report
that an apparently alarming cluster of cancer cases has arisen in an
innocuous normal distribution, and students will be able to explain to
their parents what that means.

http://www.nytimes.com/2001/11/28/national/portraits/28LESS.html?ex=1007958116&ei=1&en=1632c5b2f38feecc

Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company


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