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Increasing the Pipeline Through Undergraduate Programs: Statistics at Liberal Arts Colleges. Katherine Taylor Halvorsen Department of Mathematics & Statistics Smith College Workshop for Chairs of Statistics and Biostatistics Programs JSM, Denver, CO August 2, 2008. Overview.
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Increasing the Pipeline Through Undergraduate Programs: Statistics at Liberal Arts Colleges Katherine Taylor Halvorsen Department of Mathematics & Statistics Smith College Workshop for Chairs of Statistics and Biostatistics Programs JSM, Denver, CO August 2, 2008
Overview • What’s a liberal arts college? • Statistics in liberal arts colleges • Challenges for statistics faculty in liberal arts colleges • Characteristics of liberal arts students • Attracting and keeping liberal arts students in graduate statistics • Synergies between liberal arts colleges and statistics graduate programs
What’s a Liberal Arts College? Liberal Arts Colleges: • Provide general education, not vocational • Instill habits and methods of learning • Emphasize breadth over depth • Attain breadth through • Distribution requirements • Strong advising • Majors often limited to 10 required courses • May require at least half of total credits taken outside major
What’s a Liberal Arts College? • Typically LACs are small and old • 1200 to 2400 students • 150-280 full-time faculty, most with PhDs • Few adjunct faculty • Bowdoin founded 1794, Grinnell 1846, Dickinson 1783, Mount Holyoke 1837, Smith 1872 • Most started as single-sex institutions • Many became coed in the 1970s • Smith, Wellesley, and MHC have remained women’s colleges
What’s a Liberal Arts College? • Focus is on undergraduate education • Classes are typically small (10-45 students) • Graduate programs, if any, are small
Statistics in Liberal Arts Colleges* • Few PhD statisticians among faculty • 53% of colleges have none • 40% have one • Three standard courses offered • 88% teach Intro (with or without a calc requirement) • 81% teach Probability-Math Stat sequence (compared to 93% in 1993) • Software heavily used in stat courses • 75% of Intro courses use software • 55% of Probability-Math Stat courses use software *Survey on Statistics within the Liberal Arts College, Tom Moore and Julie Legler, 2003
Statistics in Liberal Arts Colleges* • Student projects incorporated into stats courses • 68% of Intro courses use projects • 48% of Probability-Math Stat sequences use projects • Courses beyond the three standard courses are offered at 29% of schools surveyed. Courses include: • Regression • Stat II • Design • Linear Models • Multivariate • Non-parametric * Survey on Statistics within the Liberal Arts College, Tom Moore and Julie Legler, 2003
Statistics in Liberal Arts Colleges(Smith College as a typical case) • Most introductory statistics courses are taught outside the Math & Stat Department • At Smith College these departments teach their own stat • Math & Stat Psychology Economics • Government Sociology Exercise & Sport • Over half of students who take stat, take it outside Math & Stat Department Department Students per year Math & Stat 130 (34%) Psychology 120 (32%) Economics 70 (18%) Sociology 35 (9%) Government 25 (7%) Total 380 (100%)
Statistics in Liberal Arts Colleges • Students who take Intro Stat in Math & Stat Department come from a variety of majors • Pooled data from Basic Stat, Engineering Stat, and Intro Stat courses at Smith • Biology, Biochem, Chemistry 26% • Math, Logic, Philosophy, CS 12% • Anthro, Psy, Soc, Econ, Gov 14% • Physics, Geology, Engineering 26% • Other departments 23%
Statistics at Liberal Arts Colleges(Smith College as a typical case) • Statistics concentrators major in mathematics and take their electives in statistics • Major requires 10 courses Calculus I, II, III Discrete Mathematics Linear Algebra Introduction to Probability & Statistics Regression (or Design) Probability Mathematical Statistics Analysis (or Calculus IV)
Challenges for statistics faculty in liberal arts colleges • Expectations of faculty • Excellence in teaching • Teaching 2-2, 2-3, or 3-3 courses per year • Maintaining an ongoing research program (including grant writing) • Advising (premajors and majors) • Committee service (elective and appointed) • [Statistical consulting for colleagues, the college, and external groups]
Challenges for statistics faculty in liberal arts colleges • Working in isolation (somewhat alleviated by ISOSTAT, JSM, AP Statistics Grading, ASA new faculty mentoring) • Typically expected to teach calculus or other math courses • Math colleagues have different expectations and assumptions • Difficult to hire statisticians
Liberal Arts Students • Students are of traditional age • Most are18-22 • Smith, Wellesley, and MHC have programs for non-traditional aged women (24 and older)
Liberal Arts Statistics Students • Students are talented and motivated • Broad undergraduate backgrounds • Good communication skills: oral & written • Used to working independently • Used to projects that involve data collection, analysis, and interpretation • Strong computer skills in data analysis • BUT, have fewer math & stat courses than typical math or stat major at a university
Liberal Arts Students • Students are used to: • A small-school atmosphere • Excellent teaching • Opportunities for research with faculty • Close relationships with some faculty including dinners at faculty homes • Inclusive departmental activities: talks, meals, clubs, contests, conferences, hiring decisions • Being encouraged in their work and taken seriously by adults
Liberal Arts Students • Student plans for their future • Many expect to go to graduate programs eventually • Usually 1 or 2 go to graduate school directly from their undergraduate programs • Approximately 1 student every 2 or 3 years goes to graduate school in statistics • Most take a year or two off after college to work or explore (e.g., Teach for America)
Attracting and Keeping Liberal Arts Students in Statistics and Biostatistics Graduate Programs • Students come from a background where they were nurtured as a whole person • Coming from a small school, the adjustment to a large university may create significant stress • They know they are bright and capable • They are not used to a more competitive environment • They are not used to struggling with academic work • They don’t know they are under prepared for graduate work • They may conclude they are no good and drop out (or worse)
Attracting and Keeping Liberal Arts Students in Statistics and Biostatistics Graduate Programs • And there is a two-cultures issue in many graduate programs • Many Asian students come to U.S. graduate schools already holding masters degrees in math or stat from their own country • Their undergraduate programs consisted almost entirely of math and stat courses • And they speak to each other in their native languages outside of class • U.S. students feel overwhelmed and excluded. The math and stat are above their level and so is the pace.
Attracting and Keeping Liberal Arts Students in Statistics and Biostatistics Graduate Programs • For US students the transition from undergraduate to graduate school is analogous to the transition from high school to college • Graduate schools might try some of the strategies colleges use to help less well- prepared students to succeed
Attracting and Keeping Liberal Arts Students in Statistics and Biostatistics Graduate Programs • Some possible strategies • Initiate summer programs students attend in the summer before their first year in graduate school • Discuss the issue of prior preparation with entering students. Tell them what you expect them to know and tell them how to address their lack of preparation • Assign trained advisors to the first-year students to ensure that students get appropriate advice on their first semester courses • Ensure student success by enrolling them in courses they can complete
Attracting and Keeping Liberal Arts Students in Statistics and Biostatistics Graduate Programs • More suggestions for addressing the problem • Group students on prior experience and use strong advising to guide different groups into different courses • Allow students entering with only a bachelors degree more time (one or two semesters) before taking the qualifying exams
Attracting and Keeping Liberal Arts Students in Statistics and Biostatistics Graduate Programs • Additional suggestions • Welcome students to your program through social events with the department • Spend time with students outside of class (office hours, department events) • Create a department culture that values students • Reach out to students who struggle • Use student evaluations to monitor teaching quality
Synergies between liberal arts colleges and statistics graduate programs • Liberal Arts Colleges can provide talented, hard working, enthusiastic students to graduate programs • Graduate programs in statistics can encourage their talented students to consider careers in liberal arts colleges
Resources • Statistics at Liberal Arts Colleges, Thomas L. Moore and Rosemary A. Roberts, The American Statistician, May 1989, Vol 43, No. 2, 80-85. • Survey on Statistics within the Liberal Arts College, Tom Moore and Julie Legler, http://www.math.grinnell.edu/~mooret/reports/reports.html • Report to ASA Board from the Strategic Initiatives Workshop on "Strengthening connections between liberal arts colleges and graduate programs in statistics" Tom Moorehttp://www.math.grinnell.edu/~mooret/reports/reports.html