Seminar: Educating the future statisticians; bringing our teaching up to date
13 June 2023, 4:00 pm–6:00 pm
Professor Andrew Gelman opens his famous bag of teaching tricks and considers new directions for statistics education.
This event is free.
Event Information
Open to
- All
Availability
- Yes
Cost
- Free
Organiser
-
Network of Applied Statisticians in Health
In this seminar we discuss how to design a statistics course that is modern both in form (student-centered learning) and content (statistics as a tool in scientific inquiry, not as a set of isolated studies). We consider different ways this might be done, including through existing textbooks and online materials as well as materials that we have developed based on our own research and teaching experiences. We discuss introductory courses and also more advanced courses, both theoretical and applied.
There will be a drinks reception after the seminar for in-person attendees.
This seminar is hosted jointly by the UCL Network of Applied Statisticians in Health, UCL Institute for Mathematical and Statistical Sciences and the Teaching Statistics Section of the Royal Statistical Society,.
(This will be a hybrid event, details on how to join the online event is given on the registration website)
This event organised by UCL's Network of Applied Statiscians in Health.
About the Speaker
Andrew Gelman
Professor of Political Science at Columbia University
Andrew Gelman is a professor of statistics and political science at Columbia University. He has received the Outstanding Statistical Application award three times from the American Statistical Association, the award for best article published in the American Political Science Review, the Mitchell and DeGroot prizes from the International Society of Bayesian Analysis, and the Council of Presidents of Statistical Societies award. His books include Bayesian Data Analysis (with John Carlin, Hal Stern, David Dunson, Aki Vehtari, and Donald Rubin), Teaching Statistics: A Bag of Tricks (with Deborah Nolan), Data Analysis Using Regression and Multilevel/Hierarchical Models (with Jennifer Hill), Red State, Blue State, Rich State, Poor State: Why Americans Vote the Way They Do (with David Park, Boris Shor, and Jeronimo Cortina), A Quantitative Tour of the Social Sciences (co-edited with Jeronimo Cortina), and Regression and Other Stories (with Jennifer Hill and Aki Vehtari).
Andrew has done research on a wide range of topics, including: why it is rational to vote; why campaign polls are so variable when elections are so predictable; the effects of incumbency and redistricting; reversals of death sentences; police stops in New York City, the statistical challenges of estimating small effects; the probability that your vote will be decisive; seats and votes in Congress; social network structure; arsenic in Bangladesh; radon in your basement; toxicology; medical imaging; and methods in surveys, experimental design, statistical inference, computation, and graphics.
More about Andrew Gelman