No Subject

2001-05-31 Thread Fanny Martino

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No Subject

2001-05-04 Thread Carl Huberty



 Why do articles appear in print when 
study methods, analyses, results, and conclusions are somewhat faulty?  
[This may be considered as a follow-up to an earlier edstat interchange.]  
My first, and perhaps overly critical, response  is that the editorial 
practices are faulty.  I don't find Dennis Roberts' "reasons" in his 27 Apr 
message too satisfying.  I regularly have students write critiques of 
articles in their respective areas of study.  And I discover many, many, 
... errors in reporting.  I often ask myself, WHY?  I can think of two 
reasons: 1) journal editors can not or do not send manuscripts to reviewers with 
statistical analysis expertise; and 2) manuscript originators do not regularly 
seek methodologists as co-authors.  Which is more prevalent?
 For whatever it is worth 
...
 
Carl Huberty


(no subject)

2001-05-03 Thread Ivan Balducci

subscribe ,edstat-l>ivan balducci, unesp>



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2001-05-01 Thread SamFaz Consulting
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No Subject

2001-04-20 Thread Hindley, Jane

Dear Eric,

I'm writing my summer school course outline, and would like to know
what the budget is for outside speakers before approaching anyone.  The
outline should be finished by the end of next week.

best wishes,

janeh

 application/ms-tnef


No Subject

2001-04-13 Thread cchiu+

Hello:

I am starting to work on a longitudinal survey project and am looking for 
some classical references for the panel analysis. Any suggestions will be 
greatly appreciated. Thanks!

Sincerely,
Chris



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No Subject

2001-04-09 Thread NEUMA TERESINHA NADAL




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Re: (no subject)

2001-04-02 Thread dennis roberts

well, this is a tricky sort of ?  if in fact, all REAL scores that 
actually convert to a SAT value ... anything = to or > than 800 are listed 
as ... 800 ... then, the ? really can't be ... what is the p value for 
having 800 or more ... has to be what is the p value for 800

but, the question being asked is probably wanting you to assume that scores 
could go larger than 800 ... so, for all practical purposes ... it amounts 
to a ? of 800 or more ...

minitab would say:

MTB > cdf 800;
SUBC> norm 500 100.

Cumulative Distribution Function

Normal with mean = 500.000 and standard deviation = 100.000

  xP( X <= x )
   800.0.9987

MTB > let k1=1-.9987
MTB > prin k1

Data Display

K10.0013
MTB > let k2=100*k1
MTB > prin k2

Data Display

K20.13 ... as a percent ... about .13 of ONE percent ... about the 
value you have as the answer
MTB >


At 08:23 PM 4/2/01 +, Jan Sjogren wrote:
>SAT scores are approximately normal with mean 500 and a standard
>devotion 100. Scores of 800 or higher are reported as 800, so a perfect
>paper is not required to score 800 on the SAT. What percent of students
>who take the SAT score 800?
>
>The answer to this question shall be: SAT scores of 800+ correspond to
>z>3; this is 0.15%.
>
>Please help me understand this. I dont understand how I get that z>3???
>and that it is 0.15%?
>
>Thanks for help
>
>
>
>
>
>=
>Instructions for joining and leaving this list and remarks about
>the problem of INAPPROPRIATE MESSAGES are available at
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>=

_
dennis roberts, educational psychology, penn state university
208 cedar, AC 8148632401, mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://roberts.ed.psu.edu/users/droberts/drober~1.htm



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SAT z>3 (Was: Re: (no subject))

2001-04-02 Thread Donald Burrill

Everything you need is in what you wrote.

You do understand that "z" is the usual shorthand for "a standard score", 
and that a standard score is the representation of a given raw score as 
its deviation from the population mean in standard-deviation units? 

The rest is merely a lookup in a table of the standard normal 
distribution.  (I find it to be somewhat less than 0.15%, though.)
-- DFB.

On Mon, 2 Apr 2001, Jan Sjogren wrote:

> SAT scores are approximately normal with mean 500 and a standard
> devotion 100.  Scores of 800 or higher are reported as 800, so a 
> perfect paper is not required to score 800 on the SAT.  What percent 
> of students who take the SAT score 800?
> 
> The answer to this question shall be: SAT scores of 800+ correspond 
> to z>3; this is 0.15%.
> 
> Please help me understand this.  I don't understand how I get that 
> z>3??? and that it is 0.15%?

 
 Donald F. Burrill [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 348 Hyde Hall, Plymouth State College,  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 MSC #29, Plymouth, NH 03264 603-535-2597
 184 Nashua Road, Bedford, NH 03110  603-471-7128  



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(no subject)

2001-04-02 Thread Jan Sjogren

SAT scores are approximately normal with mean 500 and a standard
devotion 100. Scores of 800 or higher are reported as 800, so a perfect
paper is not required to score 800 on the SAT. What percent of students
who take the SAT score 800?

The answer to this question shall be: SAT scores of 800+ correspond to
z>3; this is 0.15%.

Please help me understand this. I dont understand how I get that z>3???
and that it is 0.15%?

Thanks for help





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No Subject

2001-03-21 Thread BeyondTheFormula

[EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED];
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED];
[EMAIL PROTECTED];


++
+++   CONFERENCE ANNOUNCEMENT   +++
+

Fifth Annual
BEYOND THE FORMULA

Introductory Statistics For A New Century:
Integrating New Curriculum Ideas and
Modern Techniques Into Our Beginning Statistics Course

A Statistics Conference for
Mathematics Teachers Teaching Introductory Statistics

[This conference is for all teachers of Introductory Statistics, 
from those teaching the first time to the experienced teacher.  
There are sessions planned for all.]

DATE:   Thursday, August 2, 2001,   8:00 AM to 8:15 PM
Friday, August 3, 2001, 8:00 AM to 3:45 PM

LOCATION:   Monroe Community College
1000 East Henrietta Road, Rochester, NY 14623

SPEAKERS:
Roxy Peck, California Polytechnic State U, Keynote Speaker 
Peter Carlson, Delta College 
Julie Morrisett Clark, Hollins University
Gloria Dion, Educational Testing Service 
Robert W. Hayden, Plymouth State College 
Jim Higgins, Kansas State U 
John P. Holcomb, Jr., Cleveland State U 
Deborah J. Rumsey, Ohio State U 
Tom Short, Villanova U 
Mike Simpson, Key College Publishing 

PROGRAM INCLUDES: 
Several sessions focusing on how to integrate new materials 
into the beginning course,
Several sessions encompassing classroom teaching strategies 
and curriculum issues,
Several hands-on computer (web and software) and calculator 
sessions, 
Dinner and an after-dinner speaker,
Publisher's Book Exhibit
And much more!!

MAJOR THEMES INCLUDE: 
Teaching Techniques 
Technology 
Curriculum
Applications 

WEBSITE:   www.monroecc.edu/depts/math/beyond1.htm
Find out more about the Beyond The Formula conferences:
Conference History
2001 Conference: Speakers, Titles, Abstracts, Schedule
Registration Form
Hotel and Travel Instructions

Can't find the information you want?  
Email the Steering Committee:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]





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No Subject

2001-03-18 Thread áÂÂÁËÕÍÏ× ÷ÁÄÉÍ ìÅÏÎÁÒÄÏ×ÉÞ

subscribe edstat-L Vadim Abbakoumov 


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No Subject

2001-02-20 Thread Mark W. Humphries

subscribe edstat-L Mark Humphries


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No Subject

2001-02-18 Thread Jineshwar Singh

subscribe edstat-l  jineshwar singh
Jineshwar Singh
Business Department
George Brown College
St .James campus
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control how you react.
416 -415-2089
http://www.gbrownc.on.ca/~jsingh





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No Subject

2001-02-09 Thread BAECULA



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