The fair use of graphing calculator in introductory statistics
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Transcript The fair use of graphing calculator in introductory statistics
The fair use of graphing calculator in
introductory statistics courses
WEI WEI*
KATHERINE JOHNSON
MATHEMATICS DEPARTMENT
METROPOLITAN STATE UNIVERSITY
SAINT PAUL, MN
Outline
The Use of TI calculators in an introductory statistics course
Our goal of the research
Assessments
Results
Functions used in an introductory statistics course
1-Var-Stats: Descriptive statistics
Functions for distribution
Binomcdf: probabilities related to binomial distribution
Normalcdf: probabilities related to normal distribution
Invnorm: find the x value given a probability under a normal distribution
Functions for confidence intervals
Tinterval: confidence interval for mean
1-PropZInt: confidence interval for proportion
Functions for hypothesis tests
1-PropZTest
2-PropZtest
T-test
2-SampTTest
2
𝜒 -Test
Our goal
Pros
Help students to get accurate results quickly
Reduce math anxiety
Cons
Some students are good at technology while some are not
May hinder students’ understanding of certain important concepts if relying on
calculators too much
Our goal
Helped with normal probability calculation?
Normalcdf vs.
Standard Normal Distribution Table
Hindered the understanding of normal transformation?
Helped with hypothesis testing?
T-test, 2-PropZTest, 2-SampTTest etc. vs.
calculating test statistic and p-value using normalcdf
Hindered the understanding of p-value, especially the one-tailed and
two-tailed p-value?
Reduced short-term retention?
Our Assessments
Two instructors and four sections
Instructor one->calculator section
Instructor one->non-calculator section
Instructor two->calculator section
Instructor two->non-calculator section
Two Quizzes and Three Final Exam questions
Our Assessment
Quiz one:
Given after introducing normal distribution and the calculation of normal
probabilities
One multiple choice question and two calculation questions
The multiple choice question is related to standard normal transformation
The calculation questions are finding Z-score and probabilities under a normal distribution
Our Assessments
Quiz two
Given after introducing two-sample tests
One multiple choice and one calculation
One multiple choice question related to the understanding of p-value
One calculation question related to two-sample proportion test (null and alternative
hypotheses were given)
Our Assessments
Final exam questions
One multiple choice question related to normal transformation
One multiple choice questions related to p-value
One calculation question on one-sample T-test
Results
Quiz one-multiple choice question (conceptual understanding of normal
Proportion of correct answers
transformation)
Mantel-Haenszel test
No significant difference between the two instructors (p=0.66)
The proportion of correctness from the calculator sections was
significantly higher than the non-calculator sections (p=0.030)
1
0.9
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One
Two
Instructor
Results
Quiz one-calculation questions (finding probabilities under a normal distribution)
The mean grade from the calculator sections was significantly higher than the mean
Average grade (percentage)
grade from the non-calculator sections (p=0.0099)
No significant interaction between instructor and pedagogy
No instructor effect
Results
Quiz two- multiple choice question (conceptual understanding of p-value)
Mantel-Haenszel test
No significant difference between the two instructors (p=0.31)
The proportions of correctness were not significantly different between the
calculator and non-calculator sections (p=0.990)
Proportion of correct answers
1
0.9
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One
Two
Instructor
Results
Quiz two-Calculation question (two-sample Z-test)
Two-way ANOVA
The mean score from the calculator section was significantly higher than the mean score
Average grade (percentage)
from the non-calculator section (p=0.0017)
A significant interaction between instructor and pedagogy (p=0.0024)
Significant difference between two instructors (p=0.0074)
Results
For short-term retention (analysis of final exam question)
Multiple choice question-Normal transformation
Mantel-Haenszel test
No significant difference between the two instructors (p=0.15)
No significant difference between calculator and non-calculator sections (p=0.44)
Proportion of correct answers
1
0.9
0.8
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0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
One
Two
Instructor
Results
For short-term retention (analysis of final exam question)
Multiple choice question-p-value
Mantel-Haenszel test
Significant difference between the two instructors (p=0.0067)
For instructor one: proportion of correctness from the calculator section was significantly higher
(p=0.025)
For instructor two: proportions of correctness are not significantly different between the calculator
1
and non-calculator sections (p=0.11)
Proportion of correct answers
0.9
0.8
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0.5
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0.3
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0.1
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One
Two
Instructor
Results
No instructor effect (p=0.54)
No pedagogy effect (p=0.99)
No significant interaction (p=0.27)
Average grade (percentage)
For short-term retention (analysis of final exam question)
Calculation question-one sample T-test
Two-way ANOVA
Conclusion
The TI calculator significantly helped students with the calculation of
normal probabilities and understanding of normal transformation
It did not significantly helped with hypothesis testing or short-term
retention, but it did not hinder students’ understanding
Questions???