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Statistics Losing Ground To CS, Losing Image Among Students

theodp (442580) writes Unless some things change, UC Davis Prof. Norman Matloff worries that the Statistician could be added to the endangered species list. "The American Statistical Association (ASA) leadership, and many in Statistics academia," writes Matloff, "have been undergoing a period of angst the last few years, They worry that the field of Statistics is headed for a future of reduced national influence and importance, with the feeling that: [1] The field is to a large extent being usurped by other disciplines, notably Computer Science (CS). [2] Efforts to make the field attractive to students have largely been unsuccessful."

Matloff, who has a foot in both the Statistics and CS camps, but says, "The problem is not that CS people are doing Statistics, but rather that they are doing it poorly. Generally the quality of CS work in Stat is weak. It is not a problem of quality of the researchers themselves; indeed, many of them are very highly talented. Instead, there are a number of systemic reasons for this, structural problems with the CS research 'business model'." So, can Statistics be made more attractive to students? "Here is something that actually can be fixed reasonably simply," suggests no-fan-of-TI-83-pocket-calculators-as-a-computational-vehicle Matloff. "If I had my druthers, I would simply ban AP Stat, and actually, I am one of those people who would do away with the entire AP program. Obviously, there are too many deeply entrenched interests for this to happen, but one thing that can be done for AP Stat is to switch its computational vehicle to R."

3 of 115 comments (clear)

  1. Sure, we could lose 50% of our statisticians by NotDrWho · · Score: 5, Funny

    But there's only a 25% chance of that.

    --
    SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
  2. Re:As a statisticians by BorisSkratchunkov · · Score: 3, Funny

    Considering how small the population size for machine learning researchers in academia can be, it is very likely that anecdotes can constitute a satisfactory sample.

  3. Re:Agreed by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 4, Funny

    But what about Q?

    We'll have to ask M.