Content-type: text/html Ethics, Analytics and the Duty of Care ~ Statistics and Critical Reasoning

Ethics, Analytics and the Duty of Care ~ Statistics and Critical Reasoning

Statistics and Critical Reasoning

Become critical consumers of statistically-based results reported in popular media, recognizing whether reported results reasonably follow from the study and analysis conducted; recognize questions for which the investigative process in statistics would be useful and should be able to answer questions using the investigative; produce graphical displays and numerical summaries and interpret what graphs do and do not reveal; recognize and be able to explain the central role of variability in the field; recognize and be able to explain the central role of randomness in designing studies and drawing conclusions; gain experience with how statistical models, including multivariable (GAISE, 2020).

Descriptive analysis develops statistics to illustrate the shape of the data, describing characteristics such as the distribution of values (Wells, 2022).

Know – understand – be able to interpret statistics commonly used with educational data (e.g., randomness, central tendencies, mean, standard deviation, significance) (Learn2Analyze, 2017).

Relevant Links

These links are typically articles defining data literacy that include this theme in their definition.


Antti Poikola, Gartner, 2019;, Antti Poikola, Learn2Analyze, 2017;, Chantel Ridsdale, et.al., Dalhousie University, Proceedings of the Doctoral Consortium of Sixteenth European Conference on Technology Enhanced Learning, 2015;, Robert Carver, et.al., Alexander Buhmann, American Statistical Association, Open Knowledge Foundation, 2016;, Anna Bargagliotti, et.al., Alexander Buhmann, American Statistical Association, Open Knowledge Foundation, 2020;, Australian Public Service Commission, Christian Fieseler, Government of Australia, The Information Society, 2021;, Dave Wells, Christian Fieseler, Eckerson Group, The Information Society, 2022;

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