The following are a set of useful links to sites that can be found on the internet. They are all useful and its good fun playing on the web.
The CTI Centre for Psychology supports the use of computers within the teaching of Psychology in the UK. The Centre for Psychology is one of 24 discipline-based Centres supported by the UK Higher Education Funding Councils.
These are notes to cover a course be Stephen Lea at Exeter University Psychology department. The notes concern various topics in multivariate statistics.
Some useful information about causes, samples, measurement and experiments. One advantage of these pages are that they are short.
These pages are for an electronic journal about statistics teaching. There are useful papers for student's and teachers. There are also references to other resources and example data sets.
These web pages are intended to go with a book called "Methods in Behavioural Research" by Paul C. Cozby. For the various different chapter headings the writer has found some very useful web pages. Well worth a look.
These are notes to cover a course be Stephen Lea at Exeter University Psychology department. The notes concern various topics in multivariate statistics.
This is a list of psychology resources in general that can be found on the web. A useful place to start searching for information about a variety of different aspects of psychological research and experimentation.
The PsycLink Software Information Service provides comprehensive information about psychology software and WWW sources. It contains software information related to psychology instruction, research, and practice.
This page consists of tutorial Web projects put together by the students at Cornell University. These tutorials were written for undergraduate or graduate student audiences that are new to social research methods.
This is a list of various resources that can be found on the web. Some are very useful.
These pages provide an interesting set of questions about science, religion and psychic phenomena. Useful for finding out about what science is.
The aim of the Chance Project is to make students more informed, and critical, readers of current news that uses probability and statistics as reported in daily newspapers. It is an excellent source of statistics drawn from everyday American life.
This is a collection of pages about scientific experiments in the area of genetic research. Each of the studies reported here have one thing in common: they are well designed experiments.