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Statistics
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Statistics is the mathematical discipline concerned with collecting, organizing, analyzing, and interpreting data to support conclusions and decisions. It appears across an unusually wide range of academic courses — from psychology and labor economics to public health, criminal justice, aviation safety, and counseling program evaluation. What makes it academically interesting is precisely this versatility: statistical reasoning provides a common language for fields that otherwise share little methodology, allowing researchers to move from raw numbers to defensible claims about behavior, policy, and risk.

The student papers archived here reflect that breadth. Some take a descriptive approach, using data analysis to characterize specific phenomena such as attendance patterns in baseball or everyday applications of statistics in sports. Others apply quantitative techniques to social and policy questions, including social welfare programs, labor economics, and correctional officer studies. Several papers engage with comparative analysis — weighing cases against each other, as seen in the aviation safety versus driving comparison — while others work through applied or capstone contexts such as perinatal loss support and counseling program evaluation. Across these approaches, concepts like the Durbin-Watson test signal that technical fluency with specific measures also carries weight.

A strong essay on statistics grounds its thesis in a clearly defined analytical question rather than simply reporting numbers. Evidence carries most weight when it is tied to an explicit method — explaining not just what the data show but how the analysis was conducted and why that method suits the question. A common pitfall is treating statistical findings as self-explanatory; every result requires interpretation that connects the numbers back to the real-world context being studied.

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Paper Doctorate
Darwinists Must Be Crazy Imagine the Possibilities
Imagine the possibilities of learning about Charles Darwin, and studying many forms that exist, such as social, economic and political. However, does this apply to every situation based off his theory?
Essay Doctorate
Information Technology Security Over the Last Several
Over the last several years, the Internet has evolved to the point that it is a part of any organizations activities. As both governments and businesses are using this new technology, to store as well as retrieve…
Paper Undergraduate
Bottled Water Safe? Environmentally Friendly?
Bottled water is considered healthy in the U.S., but this paper offers some statistics from research and studies that may change one's opinion of just how healthy bottled water is. In this examination, the paper offers the problem, the solution, as well as a potential counterproposal, and concludes by reiterating the above.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Why Methodology and Statistics Matter in Social Sciences
Why are the social sciences governed by a system of rules? Why is methodology and application important in our pursuit to understand human behavior? How can statistics help to explain social facts?
Research Paper Undergraduate
Alcohol abuse: causes, consequences, and treatment approaches
¶ … drowned more men than the sea..." (Thomas Fuller)
Paper Undergraduate
Improving Literacy in the Seattle
Improving Literacy in the Seattle School District
Paper Undergraduate
USA World Bank Case Study
From the development of new psychological treatments to the selection of the President of the United States, statistics have been used throughout history in order to cast predictions that helped progress the scientific,…
Paper Undergraduate
Statistical information uses and applications
The role of the modern nurse is changing and as the profession becomes more complex, so the importance of statistical analysis is becoming more evident. As one study on this issue states, "knowledge of statistics is…
Paper High School
Gamblers Ruin Add Gambler\'s Ruin
Our discussion has largely focused to this point on Gambler's Ruin as applying to gaming scenarios. Theoretical contexts in which one enters into certain gambling competitions have provided the basis for the…
Paper Undergraduate
Preferences in Learning Between American
The way training is delivered in a corporate environment has a tremendous effect on results. This study investigates the role of culture in the learning styles of adult French and American students enrolled in online training programs at an international university. Using Kolb's learning style inventory, the learning style preferences of respondents in both cultural groups will be classified as divergers, convergers, accommodators, and assimilators, reflecting their general tendencies toward learning environments as conceptualized by Kolb (1985). The assumption is that Americans prefer to learn from action-oriented methods and are more comfortable learning from activities that are not job related, such as role plays and games, than do their French counterparts who prefer to learn from job-related activities based on solid research. These preferences will then be examined in light of learners' responses to Hofstede's Culture in the Workplace questionnaire, which examines cultural tendencies towards collectivism/individualism, power orientation, uncertainty avoidance, masculinity, and long/short term orientation (Hofstede, 1980). The sample population will be composed of 150 American and 150 French trainees. They are all employed in multinationals and hold jobs that require them to attend corporate training and travel around the world. Conclusions will be drawn which compare French and American cultural differences in learning style preferences and the extent to which these preferences are mediated by cultural orientations as conceptualized by Hofstede (1980). Results will assist multinational corporations in understanding the role of culture in their training scenarios as they seek to provide more effective training for their increasingly cultural diverse learner populations which can provide some proof that they will be successful in using the new skills.