MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICAL AND COMPUTATIONAL
SCIENCES
UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO AT MISSISSAUGA
STA 218H -- Statistics for Management
Course Outline -- Winter/Spring 2007
Website: http://www.fisher.utstat.toronto.edu/~brunner/utm218s07
Lecture
Times: | Tuesday 11:10am - 12:00pm in CC 2150, and Thursday 11:10am - 1:00pm in KN137 | |
Instructor: | Jerry Brunner | |
Office: | 4059c, South Building | |
Phone: | 905-828-3816 | |
email: | jbrunner@utm.utoronto.ca | |
Office Hours: | Tuesday 12:10 - 2:00 |
Note: Because of the number of students in our class and the volume of email I already receive, I regret that I will not be able to return phone calls or reply to email from students except in emergencies, and not even then if I neglect my email (which I sometimes do). I am available during office hours, and before or after class.
Tutorial
Times: | Thursday 9:10am - 10:00am in NE236 and 10:10am - 11:00am in NE286 | |
Instructor: | Lennon Li | |
Office: | 3093H, South Building | |
Phone: | 905-828-5329 | |
email: | yeli@utstat.utoronto.ca | |
Office Hours: | Friday 12 - 2 |
Faciltated Study Groups
Times: | Wednesday 4:10pm - 5:00pm in SB1161 and 5:10pm - 6:00pm in SB1143 | |
Leader: | Ramya Thinniyam |
Course Description: Acquaints students with the statistical
principles that managers need in order to extract information from numerical
data, and to understand the formal principles of decision-making under
conditions of uncertainty. Covers descriptive statistics, elementary
probability, sampling distributions, estimation, basics of sampling from a
finite population, quality control, multiple regression analysis, factorial
analysis of variance. [39L, 13T]
Exclusion : STA220H5, 248H5, 250H1, 257H5; BIO360H5; ECO220Y5,
227Y5; PSY201H5; SOC300Y5.
Course Objectives: To acquaint students with the basic principles, procedures and skills that managers need so that they are able to
Text: A brief course in business statistics (2nd ed.) by Mendenhall, Beaver and Beaver
Determination of Grades:
Quizzes (drop lowest mark) | 25% | |
Computer Assignments (drop lowest mark) | 15% | |
Midterm Test | 20% | |
Final Examination | 40% |
There will be a quiz almost every Thursday in lecture, except for Reading Week and the day of the Midterm. Quiz dates are Jan 18, 25, Feb. 1, 8, 15, March 8, 15, 22, 29, April 5.
Quizzes will be based closely upon homework problems. Homework will usually not be handed in; do it to prepare for the quizzes, test and final. The homework problems are examples of what you are learning to do. The quiz, test and exam questions are intended to let us know whether you can do it. Computer assignments will be handed in on quiz days -- maybe not on every quiz day. They are all based on Microsoft Excel. Students will hand in printouts of Excel spreadsheets and charts, or sometimes the spreadsheets may be handed in electronically as email attachments. We will let you know.
The Midterm test is on Thursday, March 1st. This is the first week back after Reading Week. Probably lots of other classes will have midterms that week too; you need to plan ahead. I will not reschedule the midterm, nor will anyone get to take it at a different time.
Procedures and Rules
http://www.utoronto.ca/health/forms/medcert.pdf.
Please be reminded that a doctor's note is not sufficient; the doctor must fill out and sign a copy of the medical certificate.
Plagiarism: It is academic misconduct to present someone else's work as your own, or to allow your work to be copied for this purpose. To repeat, the person who allows her/his work to be copied is equally guilty, and subject to disciplinary action by the university. The most likely form of plagiarism is in connection with the computer assignments. These are individual projects, not group projects. It is fine to discuss the assignments and to learn from each other, but don't copy. Never look at anyone else's printouts (especially the input or spreadsheet formulas) or show anyone your printout before it is due. It is a mistake to give your "friend" a copy of your computer assignment to hand in for you. For more detail on plagiarism, the latest version of the student handout "How not to Plagiarize" is available at
http://www.utoronto.ca/writing/plagsep.html .
The Academic Regulations of the University are outlined in the Code of Behaviour on Academic matters, which can be found in the UTM Calendar or on the web at
http://www.utm.utoronto.ca/regcal/WEBGEN117.html .
Course Timetable (Subject to revision, depending on how fast we go)
Week | Topics | Readings |
1 | Introduction and vocabulary, Descriptive Statistics, Introduction to Excel, graphical displays of data |
Ch. 1 and 2 |
2 | Probability | Ch. 3 |
3 | Discrete probability distributions | Ch. 4 |
4 | Normal and other continuous distributions | Ch. 5 |
5 | Sampling Distributions | Ch. 6 |
6 | Estimation of means and proportions | Ch. 7 |
7 | Sampling from a finite population | Handout |
8 | Tests of hypotheses for means and proportions | Ch. 8 |
9 | Analysis of variance | Ch. 9 |
10 | Industrial quality control | Ch. 10 |
11 | Linear regression and correlation | Ch. 11 |
12 | Multiple regression | Ch. 12 |
13 | Factorial analysis of variance | Handout |