A productive (in an abstract sense) week
This has been a pretty productive week, all in all. Not a lot to show in terms of work completed/produced, but that isn't everything. Most of the time, but not always. (Also, there's no pun on...
View ArticleA blog post to keep me in the habit of blogging
It's April! Let's go! Reuben's Fall by Sheri Leafgren. This weekend I finished reading Sheri Leafgren's Reuben's Fall: A Rhizomatic Analysis of Disobedience in Kindergarten for the introductory...
View ArticleWho am I writing for?
I want to write. I want to tell my story, help others, create knowledge, learn, grow, and everything else that one can do. I want to do it all - and writing is necessary for this. Therefore, I want to...
View ArticleOn Elsevier buying Mendeley
[Update: Steve Dennis, a developer for Mendeley, posted a comment explaining a bit more about the data collection and privacy concerns some users have with Mendeley Desktop. It adds some pros and cons...
View ArticleOn the perils of Express Scribe (software to aid transcription)
As part of the introductory qualitative methods course I am taking, each of us must conduct interviews and transcribe them as part of a larger class project. I recorded the interviews using Easy Voice...
View ArticleAnother comic related to correlation and causation
Tree Lobsters has another statistics comic related to correlation, causation, and the misconception that they are the same thing. This comic really captures the need for greater statistical and...
View ArticleA Comic on Randomness in Sports
I recently heard the Radiolab episode entitled Stochasticity. My feelings on the episode are mixed, and I am currently preparing a post in which I review the episode with some reasonably detailed...
View ArticleSupplementary CD for "Thinking Mathematically"
I need to use Carpenter, Franke, and Levi's Thinking Mathematically: Integrating Arithmetic and Algebra in Elementary School for a course. This textbook includes a supplementary CD with video examples...
View ArticlePriorities in grad school
I know that I haven’t really been keeping up with this blog, and I’m not making promises to myself to keep up with it in any sort of regularly-scheduled-posting way. I will, however, continue to make...
View ArticleEating in Gainesville
There’s no shortage of good restaurants in Gainesville. Branching out beyond the near-campus and Archer Road selections early was one of the best decisions I made as an undergraduate because, as my...
View ArticleStatistics on The West Wing
The United States decennial census features heavily in the sixth episode of The West Wing (S1E6, “Mr. Willis of Ohio”). In particular, the topic of sampling versus a door-to-door headcount is discussed...
View ArticlePDF Reader for Windows with Highlighting
Previously, I had been annotating PDFs on my Nexus 7 (2012) using ezPDF Reader Pro (by Unidocs) with good results. The most useful feature was the ability to highlight text in different colors. (This...
View ArticleCrafting a CV: Decisions, decisions…
My curriculum vitae – the Latin origin of “CV”, a term so ubiquitous in academia and so rare outside (in the US) that it may serve as a shibboleth – slowly evolved out of a résumé that I began as an...
View ArticleNull (baseline) model RMSEA in Mplus
Familiarity with statistical computing software - particularly programs as flexible and feature-filled as R and the packages on CRAN - has been a tremendous boon. However, this familiarity has sent me...
View ArticleIntroducing TranscribeSharp
I've previously recounted how I was (am) unsatisfied with ExpressScribe for controlling audio playback for transcribing interviews. Because the basic functionality of the program is so straightforward...
View ArticleAttitudes Toward Statistics Scale (ATS)
A commonly-referenced survey for measuring attitudes about statistics is the Attitudes Toward Statistics Scale (ATS) (Wise, 1985). In their meta-analysis, Nolan, Beran, and Hecker (2012) helpfully...
View Article
More Pages to Explore .....