A good teacher with plenty of time is always the best solution. Currently, however, teachers have to deal with more and more students in less and less time, and the more high-quality resources they can employ in their teaching, the better the results will be.
Teaching statistics is a problem. It is a mathematical discipline, and it is seen as such; but at the same time it is an essential research tool in even the most non-mathematical disciplines. Unfortunately the traditional courses are based on the mathematical foundations of statistics, and all too often students are shocked and dismayed by this. They hate it because they feel unequal to the maths content - and the teachers hate it because they don't want to have to teach maths. They want to teach their own subject and the maths is getting in the way.
Statistics for the Terrified is a non-mathematical course designed to provide students with a fundamental grasp of the principles underlying statistics and statistical analysis, so that they can carry out any research projects and critical appraisal required of them, and approach other materials (such as textbooks) with increased confidence.
Statistics for the Terrified reformulates the presentation of ideas away from the traditional mathematical approach and into straightforward puzzles and pattern recognition. Pattern recognition is our most basic and most practised learning skill, which we have been using since childhood. The mathematical baggage is put to one side, so that there are few prerequisites.
By providing the foundations of statistical understanding in a resource which can be accessed outside contact time, the teacher doesn't have to explain the mathematics, and is able to concentrate instead on the applications of statistics in their own field. Statistics for the Terrified is good for the teacher because it makes the student want to learn: it is interactive, immediate, fun and yet sophisticated. It provides a sense of real achievement and a true understanding of the mechanisms of research.
As well as its suitability for the standard undergraduate statistics course taken as part of another subject degree, this tutorial is ideal for those teaching students who require critical appraisal or research skills, and will also enable those undertaking research projects to select the most appropriate tests and techniques. Should they need to understand more sophisticated statistics, they will have gained insight which will carry them forward.
To see how Statistics for the Terrified can be used in the classroom, click here
| For UK and EU purchasers | ||
| Price (incl. VAT) | ... | No of users |
| £120.00 | ... | 5 |
| £358.80 | ... | 25 |
| £10.00 | ... | Each additional user up to 50 |
| £5.00 | ... | Each additional user above 50 |
| £1,200.00 | ... | Faculty license - unlimited numbers within the faculty |
| £2,400.00 | ... | Site license - unlimited numbers within the institution |
| For US and Worldwide purchasers | ||
| Price (incl. tax) | ... | No of users |
| $149.83 | ... | 5 |
| $488.00 | ... | 25 |
| $15.30 | ... | Each additional user up to 50 |
| $7.65 | ... | Each additional user above 50 |
| $1,500.00 | ... | Faculty license - unlimited numbers within the faculty |
| $3,000.00 | ... | Site license - unlimited numbers within the institution |
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  Statistics for the Terrified |
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Statistics for the Terrified is a tutorial which provides a thorough grounding in basic statistics
for the non- mathematician, using straightforward english and commonsense explanations. |
"I have been using Statistics for the Terrified now for the last few years and for those students
that use it it has been a transformation. The interactive nature, plenty of visual examples and clear
and straightforward explanations of the basic concepts behind probability, data distributions,
measures of central tendency and spread and common statistical tests means, first that they don't
have to listen to me droning on, second the independent nature of the experience increases both
life long and deeper learning and lastly provides me with an initial direction in which to send them
when they ask me questions."
David Newell, AECC
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  Statistics for the Terrified: |
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  •   Download demo |
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  •   Buy a copy |
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  •   What is it? |
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  •   What does it cover? |
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  •   Who is it for? |
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  •   What our users say |
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  •   History of S4T |
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  •   User survey results |
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  Free resources: |
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  •   Statistics glossary |
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  •   What is risk? |
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  •   Conditional probability |
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  •   Median and mean |
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  •   Evening the odds |
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  •   The prosecutor's fallacy |
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  •   Clinical trials |
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  •   n - sample size |
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  Contact us: |
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  •   Contact details |