Editing Talk:1347: t Distribution

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I noticed the teacher's curve is symmetrical, and after further inspection it could be interpreted as an edge detection: high values show where an edge occurs. The two highest peaks would nicely align with the edges of the paper, the next highest peaks fit the edges of the table, and the rest could be approximation artefacts, as they're equidistant and rather insignificant compared to those four. I'm not statistics pro, but maybe that rings someone's bells? [[Special:Contributions/108.162.210.239|108.162.210.239]] 07:56, 26 March 2014 (UTC)
 
I noticed the teacher's curve is symmetrical, and after further inspection it could be interpreted as an edge detection: high values show where an edge occurs. The two highest peaks would nicely align with the edges of the paper, the next highest peaks fit the edges of the table, and the rest could be approximation artefacts, as they're equidistant and rather insignificant compared to those four. I'm not statistics pro, but maybe that rings someone's bells? [[Special:Contributions/108.162.210.239|108.162.210.239]] 07:56, 26 March 2014 (UTC)
 
That's the T.  No shade. [[Special:Contributions/172.68.132.151|172.68.132.151]] 07:03, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
 
  
 
:Interesting observation. It may play into an age-long legend told and re-told among the students that some teachers grade papers by tossing the whole pile in the air; those sheets that land on the teacher's desk get a pass, those falling to the floor get a fail. Sometimes the story gets modified in such a way that papers falling on the teacher's book (or other object) laying on the desk will get a higher marking than those simply hitting the desk. The latter version would explain the higher sheet-size-apart peaks. [[Special:Contributions/108.162.210.111|108.162.210.111]] 08:57, 26 March 2014 (UTC)
 
:Interesting observation. It may play into an age-long legend told and re-told among the students that some teachers grade papers by tossing the whole pile in the air; those sheets that land on the teacher's desk get a pass, those falling to the floor get a fail. Sometimes the story gets modified in such a way that papers falling on the teacher's book (or other object) laying on the desk will get a higher marking than those simply hitting the desk. The latter version would explain the higher sheet-size-apart peaks. [[Special:Contributions/108.162.210.111|108.162.210.111]] 08:57, 26 March 2014 (UTC)
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I teach college courses, and find that exam scores typically do not fit a t distribution, or any symmetrical distrubution.  They more often show several groups, or what statisticians call "modes."  This is a source of frustration for a lot of teachers.  I saw this comic as showing how far from "normal" a real teacher's distribution is.  It seems to be two superimposed periodic functions instead of a distribution.  Or Barad-dur.--[[User:Spencer9|Spencer9]] ([[User talk:Spencer9|talk]]) 17:40, 20 June 2015 (UTC)
 
I teach college courses, and find that exam scores typically do not fit a t distribution, or any symmetrical distrubution.  They more often show several groups, or what statisticians call "modes."  This is a source of frustration for a lot of teachers.  I saw this comic as showing how far from "normal" a real teacher's distribution is.  It seems to be two superimposed periodic functions instead of a distribution.  Or Barad-dur.--[[User:Spencer9|Spencer9]] ([[User talk:Spencer9|talk]]) 17:40, 20 June 2015 (UTC)
 
When this comic came out, it put me in mind of this article:
 
https://deedy.quora.com/Hacking-into-the-Indian-Education-System
 
In which it is shown that the indian university entrance scores do not follow a nice smooth distribution, but instead something with spikes at certain key values like the minimum pass mark.{{unsigned ip|108.162.250.157}}
 
 
The comic could have been inspired by cases where a teacher actually forces the entire class to retake the exam because the results distribution don't fit the curve they expected. Example[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rbzJTTDO9f4&pp=ygUjdGVhY2hlciBmb3JjZXMgY2xhc3MgdG8gcmV0YWtlIGV4YW0%3D]
 

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