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Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, [email protected]
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Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, [email protected]@uoregon.edu.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Introduction to Educational Statistics

Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon(541) 346-2445, [email protected]

Page 2: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

WHAT IS STATISTICS?

Statistics is a group of methods used to collect, analyze, present, and interpret data and to make decisions.

Page 3: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

POPULATION VERSUS SAMPLE

A population consists of all elements – individuals, items, or objects – whose characteristics are being studied. The population that is being studied is also called the target population.

Page 4: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

POPULATION VERSUS SAMPLE cont.

The portion of the population selected for study is referred to as a sample.

Page 5: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

POPULATION VERSUS SAMPLE cont.

A study that includes every member of the population is called a census. The technique of collecting information from a portion of the population is called sampling.

Page 6: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

POPULATION VERSUS SAMPLE cont.

A sample drawn in such a way that each element of the population has an equal chance of being selected is called a simple random sample.

Page 7: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

TYPES OF STATISTICS

Descriptive Statistics consists of methods for organizing, displaying, and describing data by using tables, graphs, and summary measures.

Page 8: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

TYPES OF STATISTICS

Inferential Statistics consists of methods that use information from samples to make predictions, decisions or inferences about a population.

Page 9: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Basic Definitions

A variable is a characteristic under study that assumes different values for different elements. A variable on which everyone has the same exact value is a constant.

Page 10: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Basic Definitions

The value of a variable for an element is called an observation or measurement.

Page 11: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Basic Definitions

A data set is a collection of observations on one or more variables.

A distribution is a collection of observations or measurements on a particular variable.

Page 12: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

TYPES OF VARIABLES

Quantitative Variables Discrete Variables Continuous Variables

Qualitative or Categorical Variables

Page 13: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Quantitative Variables cont.

A variable whose values are countable is called a discrete variable. In other words, a discrete variable can assume only a limited number of values with no intermediate values.

Page 14: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Quantitative Variables cont.

A variable that can assume any numerical value over a certain interval or intervals is called a continuous variable.

Page 15: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Categorical Variables

A variable that cannot assume a numerical value but can be classified into two or more categories is called a categorical variable.

Page 16: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Scales of Measurement

How much information is contained in the numbers?

Operational Definitions and measurement procedures

Types of Scales Nominal Ordinal Interval Ratio

Page 17: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Descriptive Statistics

Variables can be summarized and displayed using: Tables Graphs and figures Statistical summaries:

Measures of Central Tendency Measures of Dispersion Measures of Skew and Kurtosis

Page 18: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Measures of Central Tendency Mode – The most frequent score

in a distribution Median – The score that divides

the distribution into two groups of equal size

Mean – The center of gravity or balance point of the distribution

Page 19: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Median

The calculation of the median consists of the following two steps:

Rank the data set in increasing order Find the middle number in the data

set such that half of the scores are above and half below. The value of this middle number is the median.

Page 20: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Arithmetic Mean

The mean is obtained by dividing the sum of all values by the number of values in the data set.

Mean for sample data:

n

XX

Page 21: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Example: Calculation of the mean

n

XX 84

4

336

Four scores: 82, 95, 67, 92

Page 22: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

The Mean is the Center of Gravity

6782

92 95

Page 23: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

The Mean is the Center of Gravity X (X – X)

82 82 – 84 = -295 95 – 84 = +1167 67 – 84 = -1792 92 – 84 = +8

∑(X – X) = 0

Page 24: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Comparison of Measures of Central Tendency

Page 25: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Measures of Dispersion

Range Variance Standard Deviation

Page 26: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Range

Highest value in the distribution minus the lowest value in the distribution + 1

Page 27: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Variance

Measure of how different scores are on average in squared units:

∑(X – X)2 / N

Page 28: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Standard Deviation

Returns variance to original scale units

Square root of variance = sd

Page 29: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Other Descriptors of Distributions Skew – how symmetrical is the

distribution

Kurtosis – how flat or peaked is the distribution

Page 30: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Kinds of Distributions

Uniform Skewed Bell-shaped or Normal Ogive or S-shaped

Page 31: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.
Page 32: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Normal distribution with mean μ and standard deviation σ

Standard deviation = σ

Mean = μ x

Page 33: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Total area under a normal curve.

The shaded area is 1.0 or 100%

μ x

Page 34: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

A normal curve is symmetric about the mean

Each of the two shaded areas is .5 or 50%

.5.5

μ x

Page 35: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Areas of the normal curve beyond μ ± 3σ.

μ – 3σ μ + 3σ

Each of the two shaded areas is very close to zero

μ x

Page 36: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Three normal distribution curves with the same mean but different standard deviations

σ = 5

σ = 10

σ = 16

xμ = 50

Page 37: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Three normal distributions with different means but the same standard deviation

σ = 5 σ = 5 σ = 5

µ = 20 µ = 30 µ = 40 x

Page 38: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Areas under a normal curve

For a normal distribution approximately1. 68% of the observations lie within

one standard deviation of the mean2. 95% of the observations lie within

two standard deviations of the mean3. 99.7% of the observations lie within

three standard deviations of the mean

Page 39: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

μ – 3σ μ – 2σμ – σ μ μ + σ μ + 2σ μ + 3σ

68%

99.7%

95%

Page 40: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Score Scales

Raw Scores Percentile Ranks Grade Equivalents (GE) Standard Scores

Normal Curve Equivalents (NCE) Z-scores T-scores College Board Scores

Page 41: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.
Page 42: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

Converting an X Value to a z Value For a normal random variable X, a

particular value of x can be converted to its corresponding z value by using the formula

where μ and σ are the mean and standard deviation of the normal distribution of x, respectively.

X

z

Page 43: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

The Logic of Inferential Statistics Population: the entire universe of

individuals we are interested in studying

Sample: the selected subgroup that is actually observed and measured (with sample size N)

Sampling Distribution of a Statistic: a distribution of samples like ours

Page 44: Introduction to Educational Statistics Joseph Stevens, Ph.D., University of Oregon (541) 346-2445, stevensj@uoregon.edustevensj@uoregon.edu.

The Three Distributions Used in Inferential Statistics

III. Sampling Distribution of the Statistic

I. Population

II. Sample