The Study of Statistics in Colleges presents a clear, practical view of how statistical science can shape higher education.
It argues for a concrete, usable approach to teaching statistics and for expanding college curricula to include social science and statistical training.
The excerpt lays out how statistics helps explain real-world issues—from population and literacy trends to marriage and divorce patterns—and why colleges should train students to gather, present, and analyze data with rigor. It emphasizes the difference between theory and application, and it urges institutions to adopt a practical, math‑based approach to statistical education that serves the public good.
- How statistics connects data gathering, analysis, and presentation to real social questions
- Why practical training, not just theory, matters for accurate results
- What colleges can do to broaden curricula with statistical science and related degrees
- Challenges in interpreting complex data, including the need for skilled mathematicians
Ideal for readers curious about the role of statistics in education, policy, and public life, and for students, educators, and administrators exploring modern statistical training.