Rodgers | Teaching Statistics and Quantitative Methods in the 21st Century | Buch | 978-1-032-68437-6 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 278 Seiten, Format (B × H): 174 mm x 246 mm, Gewicht: 453 g

Reihe: Multivariate Applications Series

Rodgers

Teaching Statistics and Quantitative Methods in the 21st Century


2. Auflage 2026
ISBN: 978-1-032-68437-6
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd

Buch, Englisch, 278 Seiten, Format (B × H): 174 mm x 246 mm, Gewicht: 453 g

Reihe: Multivariate Applications Series

ISBN: 978-1-032-68437-6
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd


Teaching Statistics and Quantitative Methods in the 21st Century is a guide for rethinking and revitalising statistics and quantitative methods pedagogy for both novice and experienced instructors at undergraduate and graduate levels. It offers modern, transformative approaches to preparing students as future researchers.

Now in its second edition, this ground-breaking volume tackles the question of how introductory statistics and quantitative methods should be taught, drawing on contributions from highly accomplished teachers. Many current textbooks and syllabi remain little changed from those used half a century ago, despite major developments in the field and its role in research. The book rests on a core principle: introductory teaching should open the pathway to advanced training and equip students to become accomplished researchers.

New chapters address:

- The role of Artificial Intelligence in teaching statistics

- Classroom software applications and applets

- Automated homework generation and grading

- Teaching the replication crisis

- New treatments of p-values, null hypothesis significance testing, and abduction

- A pedagogical approach based on statistical modelling rather than hypothesis testing

Updated and expanded chapters from the first edition sit alongside these new contributions, presenting both classroom innovations and philosophical challenges to the status quo. The result is a call for a broad reimagining of how statistics and quantitative methods are introduced, designed to engage students, support new instructors, and renew the practice of seasoned teachers

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Zielgruppe


Undergraduate Advanced and Undergraduate Core


Autoren/Hrsg.


Weitere Infos & Material


List of contributors

Preface – Camilla Benbow

Foreword – Lisa Harlow

1. Teaching Statistics and Quantitative Methods: An Introduction to 15 Chapters, Some Old and Some New, on Statistical Pedagogy and Philosophy – Joseph Lee Rodgers

Section I: Meta-Issues Related to Teaching: Philosophical Considerations

2. Including Philosophy of Science when Teaching Statistics – Michael C. Edwards

3. Teaching Statistics for Knowledge Generation and Principled Argument -- Jolynn Pek, Duane T. Wegener, and Kalina J. Dusenbery

4. When Statistical Assumptions Are Interesting Outcomes Instead of Nuisances – Looking Beyond the Mean – Rachel T. Fouladi

5. Introductory Statistical Pedagogy Should Be Reformed: Transitioning from a Hypothesis Testing to Modeling Framework -- Dustin A. Fife, Thomas W. O’Kane, Joseph Lee Rodgers

6. Teaching Introductory Statistics to Applied Researchers in the 21st Century: A Dialectic Examination – Joseph Lee Rodgers

Section II: Modern Classroom Innovations in Teaching Statistics and Quantitative Methods

7. Artificial Intelligence, COVID-19, and Ways of Knowing: Teaching Introductory Statistics as an Asynchronous Online Course in 2025 – Matthew S. Fritz

8. The Quantitative Methods Homework Unicorn: Providing Scalable Yet Individual Feedback on Analysis Results and Interpretation -- Lesa Hoffman, Jonathan Templin, and David DeWester

9. Teaching Statistics Using Web Applets -- Charles S. Reichardt

10. The Eyes Have It: Emphasizing Data Visualization when Teaching Students Meeting a Quantitative Literacy Requirement – Robert Terry. Vicent T. Ybarra

11. Low- and Medium-Tech Complements to High-Tech Tools for Teaching Statistics: The Case for Using Appropriate Technology to Implement Cognitive Principles for Teaching -- David Rindskopf

12. Flipping the Quantitative Classroom for Individualized, Active Learning – Pascal R. Deboeck

13. Selecting Statistical Software for Teaching and Learning -- Christian L. L. Strauss, R. Shane Hutton, Alexandria Ree Hadd

14. Using Projects to Teach Statistics in Social Sciences -- Jennifer D. Timmer, Carolyn J. Anderson

15. Teaching Statistics with a BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) Student Response System --

R. Shane Hutton, Christian L.L. Strauss, and Derek Bruff

16. Can the Replication Crisis Inform our Teaching of Introductory Statistics? -- Patrick E. Shrout, Joseph Lee Rodgers


Joseph Lee Rodgers earned his PhD. in quantitative psychology, with a minor in biostatistics, from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1981. He worked at the University of Oklahoma from 1981-2012, where he is George Lynn Cross Research Professor Emeritus. He joined the Quantitative Methods program in Peabody College at Vanderbilt in 2012. He retired from that program in 2021 and is Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Human Development at Vanderbilt. During his career, he has also held short-term teaching/research positions at the University of Hawaii, Ohio State University, UNC-Chapel Hill, Duke, the University of Southern Denmark, and the University of Pennsylvania. He has published three co-authored books, three edited books, and over 200 journal articles/book chapters in Statistics/Quantitative Methods, Psychology, Demography, Behavior Genetics, and related research literature. He has also had a career commitment to classroom teaching and has written many articles in the statistics and quantitative methods literature that are didactic teaching-oriented articles Two of his most recent pedagogical presentations have involved teaching sophisticated adults how to count, and how to use cartoons in statistical teaching.



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