Instructor |
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Description |
This course is an introduction to applied statistics addressed, in particular, to students specializing in the field of nursing. The focus is on developing the conceptual aspects of the subject rather than the mathematical foundations and assumes no prerequisite except elementary algebra. Topics include descriptive statistics, probability, the normal, t-, chi-square and F-distributions, confidence intervals, hypothesis testing, correlation and regression, ANOVA. Applications are directed towards health and biological studies.
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Objective |
By the end of the course students should be able to
- understand the principles underlying statistical procedures
- use the most common statistical tools
- demonstrate the use of statistical reasoning in health and biological sciences
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Prerequisites |
A minimum of C in BC Math , Principles of Mathematics 11.
Note that credit cannot be obtained for both MATH102 and MATH108.
Students with a weak math background or who have not taken a math class
for a number of years will need to catch up on their own and
perhaps find a private tutor (see TWUSA).
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Textbook |
Samuels and Witmer,
Statistics for the Life Sciences (3rd ed.), Prentice Hall, 2003.
ISBN 0-13-041316-X .
This text should be available at the campus bookstore.
It is important to use the correct edition; however, we have been using
the same edition for the past few years.
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Marking |
Letter grade assignment follows the TWU percentage to grade equivalents
except that >=85% and <95% is an A; 95% and above is an A+.
Homework | 20% | Weekly (10 total) |
Midterm 1 | 20% | Thu 9 Oct |
Midterm 2 | 20% | Thu 6 Nov |
Final Exam | 40% | Tue 9 Dec 9-12am (tent.) |
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Notes |
- Homeworks are due by the start of class each Thursday.
NO LATE HOMEWORKS except for extenuating circumstances.
Homework turned in after the start of class up to 5pm on the due date
(including coming to class late) will be penalized 10%; after that they will
not be accepted and will receive a zero mark.
If you cannot come to class to turn in your homework, have a friend hand it in
for you or make prior arrangements with the instructor.
- Note that only a few questions from each homework will actually be marked.
Study groups are encouraged, but the final draft that you hand in must be
your own work. All work must be shown for full marks.
- A scientific calculator is required; graphing or special statistical
functions are not required. Please have a separate calculator from your
cell phone or PDA, since these are not allowed during exams. Sharing of
calculators during exams is not permitted.
- During in-class quizzes/exams, all of the following are not permitted
and should be left in your closed/zipped bag and put on the floor:
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- Textbooks, notes, cell phones (turn off), laptops, PDAs,
electronic dictionaries
Your desk should be clear except for your pencil/pen and calculator.
- Students who miss more than 25% of class sessions may be barred from taking
the final exam [2008-2009 Academic Calendar p.38].
- In case of inclement weather, the TWU campus conditions will be announced
on local radio stations and posted on the TWU website at
www.twu.ca/conditions.
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Academic Integrity and Avoiding Plagiarism at TWU |
As Christian scholars pursuing higher education, academic integrity is a core
value of the entire TWU community. Students are invited into this scholarly
culture and required to abide by the principles of sound academic scholarship
at TWU. This includes, but is not limited to, avoiding all forms of plagiarism
and cheating in scholarly work. TWU has a strict policy on plagiarism (see
academic calendar 2008-09, pp. 37-38). Learning what constitutes plagiarism and
avoiding it is the student's responsibility. An excellent resource describing
plagiarism and how to avoid it has been prepared by TWU Librarian William Badke
and is freely available for download
(PPT file)
or used as
flash (14 minute)
(8 minute)
tutorials of varying length.
http://www.acts.twu.ca/lbr/plagiarism.ppt
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HW1: First Homework Assignment |
This first homework assignment is due next Thursday, 11Sep, at the start
of class (8am sharp):
Sec | Page | Questions |
2.1 | p.11 | 2.3 |
2.3 | p.24 | 2.5, 2.6 |
2.4 | p.30 | 2.20, 2.22, 2.28, 2.29 |
2.5 | p.38 | 2.33, 2.36 |
2.6 | p.48 | 2.45 |
ch2 | p.66 | 2.69, 2.78 |
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