Article ID: | iaor201526432 |
Volume: | 37 |
Issue: | 3 |
Start Page Number: | 85 |
End Page Number: | 88 |
Publication Date: | Sep 2015 |
Journal: | Teaching Statistics |
Authors: | Bedwell Mike |
Keywords: | statistics: inference |
This article is based on classroom application of a problem story constructed by Amos Tversky in the 1970s. His intention was to evaluate human beings' intuitions about statistical inference. The problem was revisited by his colleague, the Nobel Prize winner Daniel Kahneman. The aim of this article is to show how popular science textbooks can serve as a source for rich classroom activity, with a little care in the implementation by teachers. Kahneman describes the problem as ‘standard’ and answers using a fixed point number. I describe how I have encouraged my students to challenge the certainty of this assertion by identifying ambiguities that are left unexplained in the story. This way, I claim to stimulate individuals to indeed move towards Thinking, Fast and Slow, the title of Kahneman's book.