Week 8
Resources
Chapter | Topic | Slides | Annotated Slides | Recording |
---|---|---|---|---|
25 | Joint PDFs | |||
26 | Independent continuous random variables | |||
27 | Conditional distributions |
For the slides, once they are opened, if you would like to print or save them as a PDF, the best way to do this is:
- Click on the icon with three horizontal bars on the bottom left of the browser.
- Click on “Tools” with the gear icon at the top of the sidebar.
- Click on “PDF Export Mode.”
- From there, you can print or save the PDF as you would normally from your internet browser.
On the Horizon
Class Exit Tickets
Additional Information
Extra Practice/Learning
Statistician of the Week: Desi Small-Rodriguez
Dr. Small-Rodriguez is a social demographer and an Assistant Professor of Sociology and American Indian Studies at UCLA. She received a PhD in Sociology from the University of Arizona and a PhD in Demography from the University of Waikato. Dr. Small-Rodriguez is Northern Cheyenne and Chicana and grounds her work in Indigenous studies, sociology of race and ethnicity, critical demography, and health policy research. She directs the Data Warriors Lab (a mobile data sovereignty lab serving Indigenous communities) and was previously a member of the Collaboratory for Indigenous Data Governance. She is a founding member of the Global Indigenous Data Alliance.
Topics covered
Dr. Small-Rodriguez is passionate about Indigenous data sovereignty and Indigenous data governance. Using networks of Indigenous scholars and survey methods, she works toward the following two goals: (1) better collection and use of data on Indigenous people that has been gathered by external sources such as the census and other federal entities; (2) development of data methods and practitioners within the Indigenous community. Dr. Small-Rodriguez also works for health and economic justice on Indian Reservations.
Relevant work
- S.R. Carroll, D. Rodriguez-Lonebear, A. Martinez, “Indigenous Data Governance: Strategies from United States Native Nations.” Data Science Journal, 2019. https://datascience.codata.org/article/10.5334/dsj-2019-031/
“Indigenous data sovereignty is the right of each Native nation to govern the collection, ownership, and application of the tribe’s data.”
- Rodriguez-Lonebear D, Barceló NE, Akee R, Carroll SR. “American Indian Reservations and COVID-19: Correlates of Early Infection Rates in the Pandemic.” J Public Health Manag Pract. 2020. doi: 10.1097/PHH.0000000000001206.
Outside links
Muddiest Points
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Clearest Points
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