Editing UW Statistics Courses

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These are listed more or less in the order of recommendation although different courses will make sense for different students:
These are listed more or less in the order of recommendation although different courses will make sense for different students:


'''Biostatitics (BIOST)''' Biostats. Applied Biostats II (518) is an excellent course, well-taught, with a tight relationship between theory, method, and application. As of Summer '18, no one in the [[CDSC]] has taken Applied Biostats I (517), but it's this year's recommendation for a first class and we'll update this page when possible.
'''Biostatitics (BIOST)''' Biostats. Applied Biostats II is an excellent course, well-taught, with a tight relationship between theory, method, and application. As of Summer '18, no one in the [[CDSC]] has taken Applied Biostats I, but it's this year's recommendation for a first class and we'll update this page when possible.


'''Sociology (SOC):''' SOC504, SOC505, and SOC506. These are good courses but are quite applied. For [[CDSC]] members, this would be the easiest minimum option and would be slightly discouraged.
'''Sociology (SOC):''' SOC504, SOC505, and SOC506. These are good courses but are quite applied. For [[CDSC]] members, this would be the easiest minimum option and would be slightly discouraged.


'''Communication (COM):''' COM520 + COM521. Some combination of a quantitative research design and basic social scientific epistemology and design. COM520 or COM520 taught by Mako but it is a truly introductory stats class with a strong emphasis on application in GNU R. Like the SOC sequence, this would be discouraged for CDSC folks who would be encouraged to take a more technical course.
'''Communication (COM):''' COM520 + COM521 offered in 2016-2017 and then, if all goes to plan, every other year after. Due to Mako's trip to CASBS in '18-19, the sequence will likely be taught again in 2019-2020. COM520 is more about quantitative research design and basic social scientific epistemology and design. COM521 is taught by Mako but it is a truly introductory stats class with a strong emphasis on application in GNU R. Like the SOC sequence, this would be discouraged for CDSC folks who would be encouraged to take a more technical course.


'''Political Science (POLS):''' This sequence begins with POLS500 in the autumn which is similar to COM520/COM521 and is an introduction to quantitative research in the social sciences.  
'''Political Science (POLS):''' This sequence begins with POLS500 in the autumn which is similar to COM520 and is a gentle introduction to quantitative research in the social sciences. POL503/CS&SS501 focuses on "testing theories with empirical evidence. Examines current topics in research methods and statistical analysis in political science. Content varies according to recent developments in the field and with interests of instructor."  POLS503/CS&SS503 is Advanced Quantitative Political Methodology and might be a good choice for a 2nd or 3rd quarter in statistics. It is a slightly mathematical applied statistics class which introduces regression and multi-variable techniques for developing causal arguments using statistics. The course stuck fairly closely to the two textbooks Real Stats and Mastering Metrics (an undergrad textbook) in Spr 2018 and the course sites from the last two years [https://uw-pols503.github.io/2017/][https://uw-pols503.github.io/2018/] are published on GitHub, so take a look there if you want a preview of what will be covered. The class is sponsored by Political Science, so some of the content is influenced by their disciplinary norms.
 
POL501/CS&SS501 focuses on "testing theories with empirical evidence. Examines current topics in research methods and statistical analysis in political science. Content varies according to recent developments in the field and with interests of instructor."   
 
POLS503/CS&SS503 is Advanced Quantitative Political Methodology and might be a good choice for a 2nd or 3rd quarter in statistics. It is a slightly mathematical applied statistics class which introduces regression and multi-variable techniques for developing causal arguments using statistics. The course stuck fairly closely to the two textbooks Real Stats and Mastering Metrics (an undergrad textbook) in Spr 2018 and the course sites from the last two years [https://uw-pols503.github.io/2017/][https://uw-pols503.github.io/2018/] are published on GitHub, with instructor notes at [https://jrnold.github.io/intro-methods-notes/] so take a look there if you want a preview of what will be covered. The class is sponsored by Political Science, so some of the content is influenced by their disciplinary norms.


'''Economics/Stastics (ECON/STAT):''' If you already have good linear algebra and multivariate calculus, Taking ECON 580 and 581 is a good short-cut to getting a lot of methods covered in other classes. You could take SOC 504,505,506, CS&SS 503,504 560, and 564 or you could take ECON 580, 581 and read a few books. This is the ideal class for any CDSC folks although it will likely be a poor choice until you have a relatively strong mathematics background. Details on these classes are provided below.
'''Economics/Stastics (ECON/STAT):''' If you already have good linear algebra and multivariate calculus, Taking ECON 580 and 581 is a good short-cut to getting a lot of methods covered in other classes. You could take SOC 504,505,506, CS&SS 503,504 560, and 564 or you could take ECON 580, 581 and read a few books. This is the ideal class for any CDSC folks although it will likely be a poor choice until you have a relatively strong mathematics background. Details on these classes are provided below.


'''Education Psychology (EDPSY):''' EDPSY490, EDPSY491 strong focus on psychometric techniques drawn from psychology. Should be relatively easier and very applied but will not provide a good training for research using non-experimental settings. Due to the rigor and the focus on experiments, ANOVA, and SPSS, this is discouraged for CDSC members which will typically be dealing with observational data or should, at the very least, build the skills necessary to do so.
'''Education Psychology (EDPSY):''' EDPSY490, EDPSY491 strong focus on psychometric techniques drawn from psychology. Should be relatively easier and very applied but will not provide a good training for research using non-experimental settings. Due to the rigor and the focus on experiments, ANOVA, and SPSS, this is discouraged for CDSC members.


== Other First-Year Courses ==
== Other First-Year Courses ==
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There are many useful courses offered by the Center for Statistics in the Social Sciences (CSSS). Most of CSSS classes are applied and will give you a chance to apply the methods that you learn to your own projects. Try to take advantage of these opportunities to make progress on your research. CSSS 509 is an exception, and will be discussed below under econometrics.  
There are many useful courses offered by the Center for Statistics in the Social Sciences (CSSS). Most of CSSS classes are applied and will give you a chance to apply the methods that you learn to your own projects. Try to take advantage of these opportunities to make progress on your research. CSSS 509 is an exception, and will be discussed below under econometrics.  
'''CSSS566, Causal Inference''' CS&SS 566 is good. It covers experimental, instrumental variable, and quasi-experimental designs, structural equation modeling, and DAGs. It takes a relatively philosophical and theoretical approach to causality and shows that common assumptions about causal identification can be wrong (e.g adding a variable to your model ''can''introduce bias (in theory).


'''CS&SS504, Applied Regression''' is an applied, but still technical course on regression. It may vary based on who is teaching the class. This will be the default option for [[CDSC]] students.
'''CS&SS504, Applied Regression''' is an applied, but still technical course on regression. It may vary based on who is teaching the class. This will be the default option for [[CDSC]] students.


'''CS&SS 560, hierarchical modeling''' is important. Hierarchical models are the bread and butter for working with datasets that have community level variables and individual level variables, or that have longitudinal data.
'''CS&SS 560, hierarchical modeling''' is important. Hierarchical models are the bread and butter for working with datasets that have community level variables and individual level variables, or that have longitudinal data.
'''CSSS564, Bayesian Statistics for the Social Sciences''' CS&SS 564 is very good. This may vary by the instructor/text, but in 2023 it was taught using R/Jags/Stan with a project and no tests; the content is a nice blend of mathematical and applied perspectives. There are a lot of online resources that accompany the text so you can learn/re-learn the material a few different ways. It's a fair amount of work because you are building familiarity with doing a lot of simulation and digging your hands into how models are working, but the pre-requisites are low; it's not brain-breaking, just some solid grinding and that takes time. Probably easier than 560 because you will review basics of probability, binomial model, etc. from the intro-sequence but in a Bayesian way. That said, the R is a bit more intense in 564 than it is in 560. Taught using mostly base R -- not tidyverse!
'''CSSS566, Causal Inference''' CS&SS 566 is good. It covers experimental, instrumental variable, and quasi-experimental designs, structural equation modeling, and DAGs. It takes a relatively philosophical and theoretical approach to causality and shows that common assumptions about causal identification can be wrong (e.g adding a variable to your model ''can'' introduce bias, in theory).


== Mathematical Statistics and Econometrics ==
== Mathematical Statistics and Econometrics ==
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There are also 400 level introduction to machine learning classes in CSE and STAT, but STAT 588 looks better than either of these.
There are also 400 level introduction to machine learning classes in CSE and STAT, but STAT 588 looks better than either of these.
== More Courses ==
IMT 573 Data Science I. is focused on the theoretical foundations of data science and provides a nontechnical overivew of the key concepts and skills required for data science. It introduces common data science pipelines, data collection and storage, basic analytics, meachine learning and data visualization with industry standard statistical packages.
IMT 574 Data Science II. is the second course in the sequence offers theoretical and practical introduction to techniques for the analysis of large-scale data. The course does have prerequisites but depending on where you are in the program it can be a good choice.
Data 512 is Human-Centered Data Science. It introduces the fundamental principles of data science and its human implications. Data ethics, privacy, algorithmic bias, legal frameworks, intellectual property and more.
CSSS 594 is a 1 credit special topics course. Have a peek to see if whatever is being offered in the current quarter is something your interested in.
CSE 160 is a 3 credit introduction to data manipulation in Python. It is an undergraduate course but if youre coming in unfamiliar with how to manipulate your dataset this course can be helpful. *it is intended for students without prior programming experience*
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