-  Announcements:
	
	-  Your graded assignment on Geometry is being returned today. 
		
		-  Part I: #14 -- folks, the answer is in the back of the
			book! But please put it into your own words.... 
		
 -  Part II: #15
		
 -  Someone asked to see #4, p. 284
		
 
	 -  For next time: read section 7.5: Collecting Data Rather than Dust (this is the "lying" part of our "Lying with Statistics" unit!;) -- for Friday
	
 
	 
	
 -  Section 7.6: What the Average American Has 
		(or had, in
			1993)  
		
		
		-  Section 7.6: Mindscapes #5, 6, 9, 23, 26 (type up #22)
		Due Monday, 10/27 
		
		
 -  Some statistics:
		
			-  The average American has one testicle and one
				ovary. 
			
 -  The average income for a Lakeside School
				graduate  was $2.5 million (in 1997) 
			
 
		
		
 -   What's in a mean?
		
		
 -  Let's try a different measure of "central tendency":
			The median American has no testicles and two
			ovaries. 
		
		
 -  What's in a measure of center?
		
		
 -  Visual display of data:
			
			-  Heights of our class
			
			
 -  Constructing a histogram (using heights)
			
			
 -  Interpreting measures of central tendency from the histogram
			
			
 -  Heights
			of people tend to be normally distributed (if
			distinguished by sex); otherwise, if the sexes are
			combined, you might expect a bi-modal 
			distribution
			
 -  Normal distributions arise quite naturally (hexstat)
			
 -  Cars
			
 -  Let's generate our own "normal data",
				
			
 
		
		
 -  What's not in a mean or median? Spread, or
				variation 
		
		
 -  How do we quantify variation? 
			
			-  "The mean difference from the mean" is one way....  
			
 -  Standard deviation is another. This is a 
			"typical deviation" from the mean, or a "standard
			deviation"...
			
 
			In any event, these measures help us to appreciate
			about by how much an individual measurement typically
			varies from the mean.
			
			
 -  Interpreting measures of variation (from the histogram)
		
 
	 
Website maintained by Andy Long.
Comments appreciated.