February 2012
12 posts
Feb 19th
Feb 16th
I want to do this in a class....
What a neat way of combining two textbooks to get a novel course design (which meshes with current theories of interleaving): In an effort to maximize spacing and encoding variability, Robert Bjork once taught an honors introductory psychology course twice in one term. Up to the point of the midterm, the basic concepts of introductory psychology were covered using a textbook that adopted a...
Feb 9th
Divided Attention During Lecture
I’ve been having some fun reading Bjork and his followers on elements of instruction. It’s good stuff! This comes from Successful Lecturing: Presenting Information in Ways That Engage Effective Processing by  Patricia Ann de Winstanley & Robert A. Bjork: In addition to its having a strong negative impact on encoding, divided attention has been shown to have much larger effects on...
Feb 8th
Concept Inventories and Dan Meyer's Linear...
I’ve talked a bit in the past about good concept inventory questions — questions that address difficult conceptual questions but have black and white answers and don’t require any special vocabulary to answer. Dan Meyer’s Linear Modeling exercise [PDF] is a good example. The first question has a specific answer, and answering it requires the right set of intuitions about...
Feb 7th
1 note
Comparing Electoral Behavior
From the Utne Reader, in an article showing that we ” are segregating [our]selves politically and geographically” in the U.S. : “In 1992, 38 percent of Americans lived in counties decided by landslide elections; by 2004, that figure was 48 percent.” One thing that jumps out at me immediately is that elections are very hard to compare to one another. In this case,...
Feb 6th
Fireside Tutorials and Punk Economics
What do we call this genre of videos, these informal explanations by Khan Academy, RSA:Animate, Common Craft, Vi Hart, and others — these sit across the desk from you and talk things through? I have no idea. But I’m fascinated with the form, and how rethinking video this way makes a lecture seem more like tutoring — even when (as in the case of RSA:Animate) the material is often...
Feb 4th
Obesity and C-Section StatLit Materials →
Some stuff from Thursday’s class. Here’s the facilitator’s notes as well, if you want to run this in your own class. It’s a sort of “case-study lite” approach. I gave the students the following in a packet:  An article talking about research which showed people born by C-section are at a 50% greater risk of obesity than those that weren’t, and...
Feb 4th
Hill's nine criteria for causal association
Sir Austin Bradford Hill’s classic article on the characteristics of a causal relationship is well worth a read, and is still one of the most concise lists of what to look for in any research you read. Here’s a summary of what helps us make the leap from association to causation: Strength (is the risk is large) Consistency (the results have been replicated, by different researchers...
Feb 3rd
Feb 2nd
Problems of Definition: Elsevier's Prices
The recent boycott of Elsevier provides us with a great quote for use in a statistical literacy class. People are boycotting for a number of reasons, particularly because of the high cost of the “bundles” Elsevier sells. Claiming that their journals are some of the cheapest in the industry, an Elsevier rep states: “Over the past 10 years, our prices have been in the lowest...
Feb 1st
Feb 1st