I think such a website would be a real asset. It would be most useful if it either were restricted to intro. stats. OR organized so that materials for real beginners were easy to extract from all the materials for programmers and Ph.D. statisticians. As a relative beginner myself, I find the usual resources useless. In self defense, I created materials for my own beginning students:
http://courses.statistics.com/software/R/Rhome.htm Likewise, 13000 data sets would not be of much help unless there were some way to find the one you need. For example, recently I was teaching transformations of a single variable and found several nice sets of data. Unfortunately, logs seemed to be the best transformation in every case!-( I needed examples where square roots for example worked better. There are already a bazillion data sets out there for R but they are scattered among dozens of packages with cryptic names to ensure that no one can find them. I think John's idea has great potential but must be inplemented in a manner much less off-putting than 99% of the existing R materials. You would almost think that R was a secret society whose main goal was to fend off new users;-) Forwarded message: > From: jverzani <[email protected]> > > I was at the USCOTS conference in Ohio and found myself attending a > demonstration on the statcrunch software, which I hadn't seen until then. As > far > as it goes the software is fine, but what was very interesting to me was the > statcrunch.com website. As described there, this is set up to allow easy > sharing > of data sets, code and reports along with surveys etc. There were an enormous > number of data sets (13000, reports etc. that were posted by instructors and > students). The site is so successful a publisher now runs it. > > I currently put such files on my personal web site for my students to > download. > I have also enjoyed using materials from many other websites, such as those > discussed in a recent thread. However, I think it might be extremely > beneficial > from a student perspective to have an one spot where they can find the work of > many people oriented around teaching and learning R. Some site with good > search > abilities, some well chosen organization and a relatively modern look. > > I know there are a bunch of interesting web sites for R beyond the main one: > CRANtastic, the R-Wiki, the graph gallery, ... but none seem oriented towards > the exchange of data and techniques that are used to teach with R. > > Does anyone else think such a resource might be useful to the point where it > was > actually used? Are there other ideas where a common place for such information > is value added? > > If this seems like a good idea, does anyone know if there is some > off-the-shelf > content management system that is well suited towards such? > > --John > > _______________________________________________ > [email protected] mailing list > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-sig-teaching > -------> First-time AP Stats. teacher? Help is on the way! See http://courses.ncssm.edu/math/Stat_Inst/Stats2007/Bob%20Hayden/Relief.html Robert W. Hayden in the old library at 212 Main Street (P. O. Box 450) North Troy, VT 05859 phone (802) 988-2587 web site http://statland.org/ email bob statland.org (add your own "@" and save me some spam) _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-sig-teaching
