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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
Obama-One or Two Terms Obama-
Despite considerable negative statistics overhanging his first term; President Barack Obama will win re-election for a second term.
Paper Undergraduate
Death Penalty. This Is Accomplished
In this paper, we are looking at the pros and cons of the death penalty. This is accomplished by studying different viewpoints in comparison with select ethical theories. Once this takes place, is when we are able to offer specific insights that are showing how these ideas are influencing the views of an individual (when it comes to this issue).
Paper High School
Quantitative positivist and qualitative interpretivist methodological approaches to design and causation
Describe quantitative/positivist and qualitative/interpretevist methodological approaches; include examples of their research methods of data collection.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Alcoholism Women
¶ … history of the problem, psychological causes for the disease, and current research and statistics. Studies and information have not always acknowledged women alcoholics. For many years, most researchers and…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Through the eyes of a convict
¶ … Eyes of a Convict a. There are several elements of the reading that surprised me. My background does not include any type of incarceration, so I know little beyond what I've seen in shows like "Oz" on television.
Research Paper Undergraduate
National HIV Testing Day and public health initiatives
National HIV testing Day has captured increased attention throughout the country as more and more state authorities as well as local communities are interested in taking part in the two days initiative which aims at…
Paper Undergraduate
Psychometric Measurement Annotated Bibliography Babbie,
Babbie, Earl. (2002) the Basics of Social Research. Belmont, California: Wadsworth/Thomson Learning.
Essay Doctorate
Statistics and Juries in the Video \"How
Peter Donnelly is a mathematician at Oxford University and gives a presentation about how statistics often fool juries into believing misconceptions. He begins with a simple experiment based on tossing a coin. This is meant to demonstrate that there are numerous variables involved in statistical predictions. He then demonstrates how a woman was convicted of murder based on faulty statistics. In the end he shows how many juries are fooled by misinterpreting statistics presented at trial.
Research Paper Doctorate
Organic Farming in Saudi Arabia: Prospects and Challenges
Environmental and Socio-Economical Prospects and Challenges
Research Paper Doctorate
PDA\'s and Pocket PC\'s Influence
The era of the Dot.com has come to an end. Customers are no longer enamored of new and snazzy technical gadgets. So too is their reluctance with snapping up the newer versions of software that are flooding the markets.