|
|
Monash University > Business and Economics >
Working Papers 1999 – Abstracts
- 3/99
School- Leavers' Transition To Tertiary Study: A Literature Review
Merran Evans
- The theoretical and empirical literature relating to factors and problems
in the transition of students from secondary to tertiary level education
is reviewed here. Studies on persistence and attrition, and on the analysis
and prediction of academic performance of students, generally and in
particular discipline areas, are included.
- 4/99
The Predictive Approach To Teaching Statistics
Alan McLean
- Statistics is commonly taught as a set of techniques to aid in decision
making, by extracting information from data. It is argued here that
the underlying purpose, often implicit rather than explicit, of every
statistical analysis is to establish a set of probability models which
can be used to predict values of one or more variables. Such a model
constitutes 'information' only in the sense, and to the extent, that
it provides predictions of sufficient quality to be useful for decision
making. The quality of the decision making is determined by the quality
of the predictions, and hence by that of the models used. Using natural
criteria, the 'best predictions' for nominal and numeric variables are
respectively the mode and mean. For a nominal variable, the quality
of a prediction is measured by the probability of error; for a numeric
variable, it is specified using a prediction interval. Presenting statistical
analysis in this way provides students with a clearer understanding
of what a statistical analysis is, and its role in decision making.
Next Abstract

|
|