Re: norm curve template

2001-03-06 Thread Donald Burrill

Dennis also included  [EMAIL PROTECTED]  among his addressees,
but I am not on that list and therefore cannot reply to them...

On Tue, 6 Mar 2001, dennis roberts wrote:

> may eons ago ... 1974 to be precise ... i had this idea of making a 
> small plastic normal and skewed curve template ... that would help 
> students draw both types ... with information about the distributions 
> on the template ... that would help them work with problems by being 
> able to make a nice sketch ...

Yes.  I had such a template for years, and found it very useful, both for 
preparing handouts and overheads.  I don't know where it is now -- it got 
lost at some point -- and I don't remember where I came across it in the 
first place, nor exactly when (about 1980, I would guess).  Both curves 
side by side comprising most of the long edge of a template about 7 
inches long, an internal straight line in two segments representing the 
usual X-axis, with printed marks for mean and +/- 1, 2, 3, s.d.'s for 
both distributions.  

> if anyone is interested in a historical artifact (relic?) ... 
> have a look at
> 
> http://roberts.ed.psu.edu/users/droberts/statmat.jpg
> 
> i still think it WAS a good idea ... just didn't have the right 
> "marketing" team in place

Yes, it was.  But somebody evidently did.
-- Don.
 --
 Donald F. Burrill[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 348 Hyde Hall, Plymouth State College,  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 MSC #29, Plymouth, NH 03264 (603) 535-2597
 Department of Mathematics, Boston University[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 111 Cummington Street, room 261, Boston, MA 02215   (617) 353-5288
 184 Nashua Road, Bedford, NH 03110  (603) 471-7128



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norm curve template

2001-03-06 Thread dennis roberts

may eons ago ... 1974 to be precise ... i had this idea of making a small 
plastic normal and skewed curve template ... that would help students draw 
both types ... with information about the distributions on the template ... 
that would help them work with problems by being able to make a nice sketch 
...

if anyone is interested in a historical artifact (relic?) ... have a look at

http://roberts.ed.psu.edu/users/droberts/statmat.jpg

i still think it WAS a good idea ... just didn't have the right "marketing" 
team in place

_
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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