Stat101
from the University of New Castle, NSW, Australia. Impressive on-line textbook
description including many examples and explanations. Great way to review
CMU's 36-201 and gear up for 36-202.
36-201:
Statistical Reasoning at Carnegie Mellon University. This is mostly
a collection of postscript files (the handouts, hw assignments and solutions,
exam review sheets, etc.) from a liberal arts introduction to statistical
reasoning at CMU.
EdPsych 390A: Elements
of Educational Statistics from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
This course uses Data Desk, as do the 36-201 and 36-202 courses at CMU,
as well as several other statistics packages.
Psych
406, an Honors Statistics course taught in the Psych Department at
the University of Alberta (Canada) by Connie Varnhagen. This is a well
organized course with many interesting application examples.
Download a copy of a simple statistical analysis program called EZQuant.
You can download
(a zipped) program for making probability calculations for common statistical
distributions.
A Bare Bones
Introductory Textbook On-line text in statistics from UCLA. Descriptive
procedures are the first to be produced for this textbook-in-progress.
Statistics
tutorial Designed for medical and nursing students. Brief review of
basic descriptive and inferential statistics.
Resampling Stats Text and software for inferential procedures
that use Monte Carlo simulation, randomization tests, etc. as an alternative
to parametric tests.
Some Data
being collected for Statistics courses at Cornell and CMU.
Dr.
B's World of Statistics. and Dr.
B's Wide World of Web Data. John Behrens teaches statistical methods
in the College of Education at Arizona State University and has done a
great deal of work collecting resources for data sets and statistical methods
from across the Internet and combining them with his own. Check out both
links.
Home
Page and Statistics
Resource Page of David Howell, author of a popular statistics text.
Some interesting statistics information plus detailed examples of various
types of analyses.
The World Wide
Web Virtual Library: Statistics: Pointers to data sets, newsgroups
and mailing lists, electronic journals, software, etc. Particularly interesting
for the pointers to university listings.
Statistics
on the Web Yet another great set of pointers to statistical resources.
They overlap with the other pointers but have good descriptions.
Consulting
Form UCLA runs a free statistics consulting service. Write your question
on a form, submit it and you'll get a response back via e-mail in a day
or so, depending on how busy they are.
Brian Junker (412) 268 - 8873
Department of Statistics brian@stat.cmu.edu
232 Baker Hall FAX: (412) CMU-STAT
Carnegie Mellon University or (412) 268-7828
Pittsburgh PA 15213 USA