Psyx 222, Fall 2015

Psyx 222 – Psychological Statistics

Fall 2015

Instructor Information

Instructor: Shannon C. Houck, Ph.D.

Email: (the best way to contact me)

Office: Skaggs 203

Office hours: TBD

Course Information

Lectures: M, W, F, 2:10 – 3:00pm

Location: Chem. 123

Labs/Tutorials: Thursday, 246 Skaggs Building

Times: Thursdays, 10:10 – 11:00, 11:10 – 12:00, 3:10 – 4:00, and 4:10 – 5:00

Teaching Assistant: Meredith A. Repke

Office: Skaggs 236

Email:

Office Hours: Tuesday 8:00 – 11:00am

Required Text

Kirk, Roger E. (2007). Statistics: An Introduction. 5th ed. Thomson/Wadsworth.

Optional Supplementary Text

Study Guide: Denis, D. (2007). Study Guide for Kirk, R. E. (2008). Statistics: An Introduction. Wadsworth (pdf)

Course Objective

The primary objective of this course is to provide the opportunity for the student to acquire a working knowledge and understanding of statistical methods regularly used in psychological and social sciences.

Course Policies and Guidelines

Academic Misconduct

You are expected to adhere to the university’s student conduct code with regard to academic integrity. Academic misconduct in this course will result in an academic penalty commensurate with the offense as well as possible disciplinary action by the university. Please familiarize yourself with the Student Conduct Code.

Disability Modifications

The University of Montana assures equal access to instruction through collaboration between students with disabilities, instructors, and Disability Services for Students. If you think you have a disability adversely affecting your academic performance, and you have not already registered with Disability Services, please contact Disability Services in Lommasson Center 154 or call 406.243.2243. I will work with you and Disability Services to provide an appropriate modification.

Class Behavior

The expectations for this course are such that you remain respectfully silent while either the instructor is speaking or a colleague in the class is asking or responding to a question. In accordance with policies set by the University, disruptions in class will not be tolerated. If you are not enthralled, that's OK; if you talk to your neighbor, make noise with your phone, or do anything else that is distracting to me or to others, that is NOT OK. A failure to meet this expectation will result in you being dismissed permanently from the class. This policy is extremely strict as to protect the rights of students who have invested time, money and energy into this course and deserve nothing less than an optimal learning environment. Please speak to the instructor privately if you are being disturbed in class.

Attendance/Announcements

Attending class lectures is not mandatory and role will not be taken. However, please note that course notes are not posted online and I do not give my notes out for any reason – if you miss class or your lab, you are responsible for the material covered. Further, students are responsible for any announcements made in class. These may include changes in policy, due dates, assignment requirements, etc.

Course Withdrawal

November 3rd is the last day to drop classes with an add/drop form. After that date, no petitions to drop the course will be signed and no Incompletes will be given except in documentable emergency situations.

Incompletes

Departmental and university policies regarding incompletes do not allow changing “incomplete” grades after one year has passed since the “I” was granted.

Course Grades

Exams

You will have 4 required exams (including the cumulative final); 3 of these exams will be counted toward your final grade – the final exam plus your two highest other exam scores. (In other words, you get to drop your lowest exam, but you cannot drop the final.) Exams will contain a combination of multiple-choice and short-answer questions that will test your knowledge of topics covered in lecture as well as in the text. If you miss an exam, that exam counts as your dropped grade. Because of this, there are absolutely NO makeup exams. The only exception I make to this rule is for absences due to university-sponsored events (i.e., choir, band, sports, etc.); you must have an official release form in order to re-schedule, and you must re-schedule the exam well in advance. (If you fail to schedule the exam well in advance of exam day, I will not allow a makeup). THERE ARE NO OTHER EXCEPTIONS TO THIS RULE!

Exam Grading

All exams are graded using the same grading scheme. Unless there is an obvious and clear arithmetical error in the grading of your test or exam, grades will not be adjusted. Please be aware that tests are usually graded high. If you feel strongly that you would like your test re-graded, you must be prepared to subject it to a fair re-evaluation, which means your grade could increase or decrease from the original evaluation. In the event that you receive a lower grade than your original grade, you will not be allowed to keep your original grade.

Lab Assignments

A variety of lab assignments and applied exercises will be provided to you in your lab sections. These assignments are designed to increase students’ ability to apply statistical concepts learned in class. While attendance will not be taken during labs, you are highly encouraged to attend. Lab assignments will not be announced ahead of time. The number of lab assignment opportunities that will be made available to you will total to 35 points. However, you can only earn a maximum of 30 points for lab assignments (each assignment is worth between 3-5 points). This means that if you miss a lab assignment, you will have additional opportunities to earn the maximum number of lab assignment points. Because of this, there are NO make-ups for lab assignments.

Course grading

Your final course grade will be based upon a total of 330 possible points that will be distributed as follows:

3 Exams (100 points each; final exam + your 2 other highest exam scores): 300 points

Lab assignments (provided to you only during your scheduled lab section): 30 points

Course grading will be based on the following point scale:

A: 90% or higher

B+: 86-89%

B: 83-85%

B-: 80-82%

C+: 76-79%

C: 73-75%

C-: 70-72%

D+: 66-69%

D: 63-65%

D-: 60-62%

F: 59% and below

Be warned now: I will round decimal places equal to or greater than ".5" up (so a total of 89.5% will be an "A"); however, beyond this, the grade you receive will be whatever the numbers say, NO EXCEPTIONS (so an 89.4% will be a "B+"). I am aware that this can create some unfortunate circumstances for those students who are on the “bubble”. However, the problem with changing the criterion for a given student is that, once I change that criterion, inevitably another student is "right on the bubble," so ultimately someone just barely misses it. I don’t want to be overly subjective in my judgment of who should get to surpass the objective criteria; thus, no one will. NOTE: If you are a psychology major, you must get a C, not a C- for the grade to count.

The instructor reserves the right to change the syllabus if necessary.

COURSE SCHEDULE

DATE / TOPICS / ASSIGNED READINGS/EXAMS / LABS /
31st Aug. Mon.
2nd Sep. Wed.
4th Sep. Fri.
/ Course Syllabus, Course Policies
Introduction to Statistics / Chapter 1 / 9/3, Lab Orientation
7th Sep. Mon. / NO CLASS – Labor Day
9th Sep. Wed.
11th Sep. Fri. / Frequency Distributions and Graphs / Chapter 2 / 9/10, Lab 1
14th Sep. Mon.
16th Sep. Wed.
18th Sep. Fri. / Measures of Central Tendency / Chapter 3 / 9/17, Lab 2
21st Sep. Mon.
23rd Sep. Wed.
25th Sep. Fri / Measures of Dispersion, Skewness, and Kurtosis / Chapter 4 / 9/24, Exam Review during lab
28th Sep. Mon. / EXAM 1 / Chapters 1-4
30st Sep. Wed.
2nd Oct. Fri / Correlation / Chapter 5 / 10/1, Lab 3
5th Oct. Mon.
7th Oct. Wed.
9th Oct. Fri / Correlation
Regression / Chapter 5
Chapter 6 / 10/8, Lab 4
12th Oct. Mon.
14th Oct. Wed.
16th Oct. Fri / Regression
Probability / Chapter 6
Chapter 7 / 10/15, Lab 5
19th Oct. Mon.
21st Oct. Wed.
23rd Oct. Fri / Random Variables and Probability Distributions / Chapter 8 / 10/22, Exam Review during lab
26th Oct. Mon. / EXAM 2 / Chapters 5-8
28th Oct. Wed.
30th Oct. Fri / Normal Distribution and Sampling Distributions / Chapter 9 / 10/29, Lab 6
2nd Nov. Mon.
4th Nov. Wed.
6th Nov. Fri / Statistical Inference: One Sample / Chapter 10 / 11/5, Lab 7
9th Nov. Mon. / Statistical Inference: Two Samples / Chapter 13
11th Nov. Wed. / NO CLASS – Veterans Day / 11/12, Lab 8
13th Nov. Fri. / Statistical Inference: Two Samples / Chapter 13
16th Nov. Mon.
18th Nov. Wed.
20th Nov. Fri / Statistical Inference: Two Samples / Chapter 13 / 11/19, Exam Review during lab
23rd Nov. Mon. / EXAM 3 / Chapters 9, 10, 13
25th Nov. Wed.
27th Nov. Fri. / NO CLASS – Thanksgiving Break
30th Nov. Mon.
2nd Dec. Wed.
4th Dec. Fri. / Introduction to the Analysis of Variance / Chapter 15 / 12/3, Lab 9
7th. Dec. Mon.
9th Dec. Wed. / Introduction to the Analysis of Variance
Final Exam Review Session / Chapter 15 / 12/8, Final Exam Review in lab
11th. Dec. Fri. / Final Exam / Cumulative

PLEASE REMOVE THIS PAGE FROM YOUR SYLLABUS

I, ______(print your name) hereby acknowledge that I have received a copy of the Psychological Statistics syllabus for Fall 2015. I have read the syllabus and understand all the course policies and requirements. I recognize that it is my responsibility to seek clarification regarding any aspect of the syllabus, the course requirements, or the grading policies if they are unclear to me.

Signature______Date______

******************************************************************************

I do not post grades with student ID #’s. You will need to provide me with a “code name” if you would like your grades posted following tests. Please be certain to choose a code name that is familiar to you, so that you remember it when you look up your grades. WORD OF CAUTION: I will NOT accept codenames that are inappropriate (racist, sexist, general bad taste).

CODE NAME: ______

******************************************************************************

Please provide the following information below:

1.  Name:

2.  UM e-mail address:

1