RESOURCES

Month: February 2025

These resources from Math Medic are designed to save you time while sparking your students’ curiosity.

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Stats Medic Merchandise = Scholarships for Students

By Math Medic | February 16, 2025

Buy some Stats Medic swag and help fund the future for students!

What is Margin of Error?

By Math Medic | February 16, 2025

Why do we include a margin of error when calculating a confidence interval? This post includes a new lesson for introducing margin of error.

Reviewing without Reteaching – Part 1

By Sarah Stecher | February 16, 2025

Why re-teaching may not be the best option for end-of-semester review, and actually may have some problematic effects.

Strategies for Attacking Multiple Choice Questions

By Math Medic | February 16, 2025

Multiple choice questions make up half of the AP Statistics Exam. Here we discuss three strategies your students must know for MCQ success.

To Get Students Thinking and Talking, We Must Get Teachers Thinking and Talking

By Math Medic | February 16, 2025

AP Stats all-star Joshua Sawyer believes that getting students thinking and talking requires us to get teachers thinking and talking.

Assessment in the EFFL Classroom

By Sarah Stecher | February 16, 2025

How we use homework, quizzes, and tests to deepen and assess students’ learning.

How I am using the Math Medic AP Stats Review Course

By Math Medic | February 16, 2025

By Josh Tabor Like everyone else, I am constantly tweaking the way I teach AP Statistics, including how I manage the crucial time before…

Why Teach Using the Experience First, Formalize Later Model?

By Math Medic | February 16, 2025

In our previous post, we explained how we implement the Experience First, Formalize Later model. In this post, we explore the “why.”

How to Design an Experience First, Formalize Later Lesson

By Math Medic | February 16, 2025

We’ve explained the Experience First, Formalize Later lesson design and its benefits. Now, we’ll discuss the design ideas.

Why Isn’t Bias Accounted for by the Margin of Error?

By Math Medic | February 16, 2025

When teaching confidence intervals, we talk about how bias is not accounted for by the margin of error.  Seems easy enough to me, so when…