Course Syllabus
Welcome
Welcome to Statistics, One Half Unit.
We are pleased that you selected Mizzou Academy's course to fulfill your unique educational needs. You are now a member of our large and diverse student body—a student body that comes from the United States and the world. To succeed at independent study, you will need to develop a study plan by setting realistic goals and working toward them. This page offers you an overview of the course and will help you achieve your goals. It contains an introduction to the course, as well as information about lessons, grades, and technical specifications.
Course Overview
Statistics is about making appropriate conclusions from data, especially incomplete data.
You have encountered statistics in previous mathematics courses, in such things as calculating averages and drawing scatterplots of data. You continue to meet statistics in daily events such as weather forecasts, the news, and sports. People use statistics for a lot of things that affect you: allocating money to schools, deciding whether a medicine is safe and effective, keeping the right amount of food available, and setting prices.
Statistics can be misused. Suppose in the course of a week, you ate nothing for six days, and then you ate 21 meals on the last day of the week. It would be correct to claim you ate an average of three meals a day. But that would be misleading.
Critically interpreting claims about data is a skill of great value to you as a consumer of goods and services, as a citizen, and as a producer of goods and services. This course will help you ask the right questions about data, experiments, and surveys. This course will help you to draw the right conclusions.
This introductory course will provide you with a background in probability and statistics that you can use for basic data analysis and decision making. Lesson topics include summarizing and graphing data; statistics for describing, exploring, and comparing data; probability; probability distributions; normal probability distributions; estimates and sample sizes; and correlations and regressions.Academic Integrity Policy
Our academic integrity policy at Mizzou Academy is based on our values of ethical behavior, learning, and giving all stakeholders the benefit of the doubt. Collaboration, research, and technical literacy are vital 21st-century skills when combined with academic integrity.
Definitions
Mizzou Academy's academic integrity policy is aligned with the University of Missouri’s academic integrity policy. The definitions of what constitutes "cheating" and "plagiarism"are posted on the Provost’s Advising Council’s webpage which can be found here: https://advising.missouri.edu/policies/academic-integrity.
Issues Involving Violations of Academic Integrity
If we evaluate an assignment or exam and find that it does not demonstrate academic integrity, consequences include partial or no credit given for that work. If you fall into a pattern of academic dishonesty, more serious consequences will follow.
Use of AI and Online Resources
Online resources, including ChatGPT and other generative artificial intelligence tools, should be used responsibly. Many assignments don’t necessitate the use of resources. For example, personal reflections, examples, and narratives, creative writing, and reflections and journal entries are meant to capture your unique experiences and ideas.
For some assignments, AI tools and online resources can assist you in your learning. They can help you develop and support your original work. That said, they cannot and should not replace your original work.
We view using online sources, much like collaborating with classmates. As a learner, you will often seek ideas from others by having conversations, exploring a variety of information sources, and doing more formal research. Likewise, online and AI tools can help you gather ideas, decide how to organize them, and find the best ways to support those ideas. We believe that learning how to use all the tools and resources available to you purposefully, effectively, and responsibly is a key skill for school and life.
If you use any ideas, information, or wording from your resources–including generative, collaborative, print, and online resources–you must give credit to those sources by honestly identifying which resources you used.
For more information about when and how to cite resources, as well as tips and examples of how to use them appropriately and effectively, please visit our Learning Library, Shelves 9 and 9.5.
Accessibility
If you anticipate barriers related to the format or requirements of this course, please let Mizzou Academy know as soon as possible. If disability-related accommodations are necessary (for example, a scribe, reader, extended time on exams, captioning), please contact Mizzou Academy.
About Exams at Mizzou Academy*
Your exams are online. It is your responsibility to schedule your exams.
During exams, unless otherwise noted, you are not allowed to navigate away from the exam or use any other resources. If you deviate from the exam guidelines without proper prior permission, it is considered cheating on an exam.
Scheduling Exams
Global Courses
Mizzou Academy values fair testing and assessment to determine that students master essential course concepts and skills. During a proctored exam, tests are supervised by an impartial individual (a proctor) to help ensure that all exams maintain academic integrity. You will need to use a Mizzou Academy approved proctor. Please see the Exam Proctoring webpage for more information.
- Choose a proctor and make arrangements for taking the exam.
- At least 2 weeks prior to taking your exam, submit your proctor information to Mizzou Academy
- You will be sent an email notice indicating if your chosen proctor has been approved or denied.
- Arrive at your proctor’s testing site at the scheduled time with a photo ID. At testing time, you will log into your Mizzou Academy account and select the exam for your proctor to access and administer.
Global Classroom Courses
If you are taking a global classroom course, work with your local teacher to identify your date of the exam and how you will be proctored. You do not need to request an exam date with the above form.
HOW TO PREPARE FOR EXAMS
- Complete and review all assignments.
- Review the learning objectives; make sure you can accomplish them.
- Be prepared to explain any key terms and concepts.
- Review all the lessons, exercises, and study questions.
- Review any feedback and/or comments on your assignments and previous exams; look up answers to any questions you missed.
Additional Course Policies and links
**Not applicable to World Language courses.
Lead Teacher Introduction
Brennan Ransdell
Teacher
Mathematics Division Chair
Pacing
This course can be completed in as few as six weeks or take up to 6 months (180 calendar days). The six weeks are counted from the date of the first lesson submission and not the date of enrollment.
Required Materials
Textbook
Required Textbook: Triola, Mario F. Elementary Statistics. (10th Edition). Boston, San Francisco, New York: Pearson Addison-Wesley, 2006.
Recommended: Loyer, Milton. Student's Solutions Manual to accompany Elementary Statistics, Tenth Edition by Mario F. Triola. Boston, San Francisco, New York: Pearson Addison-Wesley, 2007.
Materials
For this course you will also need a hand-held calculator with the following basic keys:
- Graphing calculator. A TI-83-Plus (TI-83+) or TI-84-Plus (TI-84+) graphing calculator are highly recommended.
- Appropriate Ti-Connect software.
- Statdisk (provided with textbook and in online resources)
Technical Requirements
The most up-to-date requirements can be found here:
- Computer Requirements
- Browser Requirements
- Proctoring Requirements
- Microphone (external or internal)
- Webcam
Additional requirements for the course are below:
- audio and video recording capabilities (e.g. smartphone, camera)
Quizzes and Assignments
At the end of each lesson is a graded quiz or written assignment. Quizzes are multiple choice and follow every lesson other than lessons 3 and 8. Following lessons 3 and 8 you will submit a written assignment that will be graded by your instructor.Quizzes
Quizzes are graded assignments at the end of each lesson other than lessons 3 and 8. Each graded quiz consists of between 12 and 25 multiple-choice questions that are worth 1 points each. These points count toward your course grade. The quizzes are open-book assessments that are graded electronically.Quizzes are taken online. After you submit them, you’ll quickly receive a report on how you did. Unlike exams, you may use any assigned readings, your notes, and other course-related materials to complete graded quizzes and assignments. Please note that graded quizzes cannot be retaken.
You must submit all quizzes in sequence (Lesson 1, then Lesson 2, etc.)
You may submit lessons at your own pace. However, passwords for the final exam will not be sent out before 6 weeks (42 calendar days from) from the date of the 1st lesson submission.
Written Assignments
You have a written assignment following lesson 3 and another following lesson 8. Each of these will analyze a given data set in a different way. Unlike quizzes, the assignments will be graded by your teacher using the rubric provided for each assignment.
Exams
You must take two formal, supervised examinations for this course: a midterm that follows Lesson 4 and a final that follows Lesson 8. Each exam is worth 140 points. Both exams consist of 35 multiple-choice questions worth 4 points each. You will not be allowed to use your textbook, notes, study guide, or any other reference materials during the exams. You may use your calculator.
Your midterm and final exams are online. It is your responsibility to schedule your exams. See the proctored exams tab on the Helpful Resources page for more information about scheduling and preparing for exams.
Allow enough time (2 weeks) for our office to receive your request and communicate with your chosen exam site and proctor. Mizzou Academy has approved exam sites throughout the United States and around the world.
See the "About Exams" in the policies section for additional information on exams at Mizzou Academy. Also, view the Exam Proctoring page on Mizzou Academy's website for all things proctoring related.
Exam Matrix
Midterm Exam | Final Exam | |
Lessons Covered | Lessons 1 - 5 | Lessons 6 - 8 |
When to request an exam | At least 2 weeks in advance | At least 2 weeks in advance |
Questions and type | 35 multiple-choice questions, 4 points each | 35 multiple-choice questions, 4 points each |
Points possible | 140 points | 140 points |
Time limit | 2.5 hours | 2.5 hours |
What to bring to the exam site |
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More information | See the the Midterm Exam Study Guide in the modules of the course. | See the the Final Exam Study Guide in the modules of the course. |
Grades
Your final grade will be based on the number of points you earn on quizzes and exams.
You will be able to see your exam percentage in the "Exams" column in your grade book.
The following grading scale applies only to students who meet this standard:
Grade | Percentage |
---|---|
A | 90–100 |
B | 80–89 |
C | 70–79 |
D | 60–69 |
F | 0–59 |
After completing the course, unofficial transcripts will be available in the Tiger Portal. See this page for information on requesting official transcripts.
Getting Started Resources (Canvas and Other Resources)
Explore the resources below to learn more about each element and how they work in your Mizzou Academy Canvas course.
Canvas and Technical Support
Canvas will be used as the primary platform for accessing course materials and assignments for this class.
- Access Canvas through the Tiger Portal https://cehd.missouri.edu/mizzou-academy/
- View Canvas Guides by Mobile App
- Getting Started with Canvas
- For Canvas, Passwords, or any other computer-related technical support create a ticket in Canvas or contact Mizzou Academy Support.
- How do I get help with Canvas as a student?
- Mizzou AcademySupport Phone: +1 855 256-4975
- Mizzou Academy Email - MizzouAcademy@missouri.edu
Course Summary:
Date | Details | Due |
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