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What will I learn in a first course in statistics?

I think I will have to take a semester or two of 100-level college college courses in statistics. What exactly will I be learning? Which specific topics will be covered/ How difficult is it?

Thanks.

2 Responses to “What will I learn in a first course in statistics?”

  • efqy:

    The exact content and level it is taught at vary quite a bit, but usually covers some basic probability concepts, a little on distributions and densities, some stuff on the normal distribution, sampling distribution of the mean, the central limit theorem, often some regression, anova or contingency table analysis. Take a look at the course descriptions!

    Difficulty varies – usually the material is taught at a mathematically elementary level, in some cases requiring little more than arithmetic and perhaps some basic algebra. In other cases you’ll use basic calculus.

    However, the biggest stumbling block for students isn’t the mathematical level, it’s usually the fact that its very concept-dense — most first year university courses contain a handful of core "new" tricky but fundamental ideas, whereas in a statistics subject you’ll get about one a week, each building on the ones before. Many of these ideas are non-intuitive for many students. When coupled with the difficulty that it’s often poorly taught, sometimes by people who only half-understand the material (particularly if you’re getting taught within another subject area), it can begin to seem arcane.

    It isn’t arcane, though – there’s a handful of simple, powerful ideas underlying much of statistics. It’s just not usually present that way.

  • fcas80:

    How to calculate test statistics like mean and standard deviation, the properties of the normal distribution, how to use it to calculate probabilities, how to interpret confidence intervals.

    How difficult is it – not as difficult as calculus.

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