Teaching Sample Survey Design—A Project Using a Virtual Population

Sample survey design is a topic usually taught to students undertaking a minor or major in statistics in the latter part of their bachelor’s degree. This article describes an assessment project that fosters active learning and helps to develop a set of essential skills for statistical practice. The...

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Main Author: Carole Louise Birrell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-05-01
Series:Journal of Statistics Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10691898.2020.1780173
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spelling doaj-541b15354bd740b7b2c6da70ed793af62020-11-25T01:25:23ZengTaylor & Francis GroupJournal of Statistics Education1069-18982020-05-0128216517410.1080/10691898.2020.17801731780173Teaching Sample Survey Design—A Project Using a Virtual PopulationCarole Louise Birrell0University of WollongongSample survey design is a topic usually taught to students undertaking a minor or major in statistics in the latter part of their bachelor’s degree. This article describes an assessment project that fosters active learning and helps to develop a set of essential skills for statistical practice. The project is completed in pairs and submitted in two parts. This allows feedback from the first part to be acted upon for the second part. Ideally, students would gain experience sampling from an actual population. However, the time involved in obtaining approval from the university’s ethics committee may not be feasible for a short course. An alternative is to use an online virtual population such as the Islands, which provides students with an experience in setting up a sampling frame, requesting consent from potential participants, and collecting data. Proficiency in written communication and teamwork are highly valued by employers of statistics graduates. This project encourages collaborative learning in the design of the sample survey, statistical analysis of data collected, and the development of a final written report. It can easily be adapted for first year students and also be extended to suit Honors or Masters level students.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10691898.2020.1780173educationsamplingstatistical computingstatistics assessmentthe islands
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carole Louise Birrell
spellingShingle Carole Louise Birrell
Teaching Sample Survey Design—A Project Using a Virtual Population
Journal of Statistics Education
education
sampling
statistical computing
statistics assessment
the islands
author_facet Carole Louise Birrell
author_sort Carole Louise Birrell
title Teaching Sample Survey Design—A Project Using a Virtual Population
title_short Teaching Sample Survey Design—A Project Using a Virtual Population
title_full Teaching Sample Survey Design—A Project Using a Virtual Population
title_fullStr Teaching Sample Survey Design—A Project Using a Virtual Population
title_full_unstemmed Teaching Sample Survey Design—A Project Using a Virtual Population
title_sort teaching sample survey design—a project using a virtual population
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Journal of Statistics Education
issn 1069-1898
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Sample survey design is a topic usually taught to students undertaking a minor or major in statistics in the latter part of their bachelor’s degree. This article describes an assessment project that fosters active learning and helps to develop a set of essential skills for statistical practice. The project is completed in pairs and submitted in two parts. This allows feedback from the first part to be acted upon for the second part. Ideally, students would gain experience sampling from an actual population. However, the time involved in obtaining approval from the university’s ethics committee may not be feasible for a short course. An alternative is to use an online virtual population such as the Islands, which provides students with an experience in setting up a sampling frame, requesting consent from potential participants, and collecting data. Proficiency in written communication and teamwork are highly valued by employers of statistics graduates. This project encourages collaborative learning in the design of the sample survey, statistical analysis of data collected, and the development of a final written report. It can easily be adapted for first year students and also be extended to suit Honors or Masters level students.
topic education
sampling
statistical computing
statistics assessment
the islands
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10691898.2020.1780173
work_keys_str_mv AT carolelouisebirrell teachingsamplesurveydesignaprojectusingavirtualpopulation
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