WHEN STATISTICAL LITERACY REALLY MATTERS: UNDERSTANDING PUBLISHED INFORMATION ABOUT THE HIV/AIDS EPIDEMIC IN SOUTH AFRICA

Authors

  • SALLY HOBDEN University of KwaZulu-Natal

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52041/serj.v13i2.281

Keywords:

Statistics education research, Statistical literacy hierarchy, HIV/AIDS data interpretation, Median

Abstract

Information on the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Southern Africa is often interpreted through a veil of secrecy and shame and, I argue, with flawed understanding of basic statistics. This research determined the levels of statistical literacy evident in 316 future Mathematical Literacy teachers’ explanations of the median in the context of HIV/AIDS survival times. Drawing on the three-tiered statistical literacy hierarchy proposed by Watson (1998, 2006) and the SOLO taxonomy (Biggs & Collis, 1982), a categorisation framework was constructed. About half the teachers were classified below the level of basic understanding of the median. Misunderstandings included confusion of the median survival time with the maximum survival time, and a failure to consider the spread of the data along with the centre.

First published November 2014 at Statistics Education Research Journal Archives

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Published

2014-11-30