Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not 100% false. There are mathematical statistics courses which require multi. Joint, marginal, and conditional probability density functions require multiple integration. Change of variables requires Jacobians.
Look at math 309 and 431 here: https://math.wisc.edu/undergraduate/courses-enrollment/probability-courses/
That page is specifically for math majors and minors/certificates, not engineering.
Statistics for Engineering is 324 or 371.
https://guide.wisc.edu/courses/stat/
OP asked if AP Stat requires Multi. AP Stat is equivalent to 301, if we go by Wisc. worldview, it requires Quant Reasoning. No idea what that is?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not 100% false. There are mathematical statistics courses which require multi. Joint, marginal, and conditional probability density functions require multiple integration. Change of variables requires Jacobians.
Look at math 309 and 431 here: https://math.wisc.edu/undergraduate/courses-enrollment/probability-courses/
That page is specifically for math majors and minors/certificates, not engineering.
Statistics for Engineering is 324 or 371.
https://guide.wisc.edu/courses/stat/
OP asked if AP Stat requires Multi. AP Stat is equivalent to 301, if we go by Wisc. worldview, it requires Quant Reasoning. No idea what that is?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not 100% false. There are mathematical statistics courses which require multi. Joint, marginal, and conditional probability density functions require multiple integration. Change of variables requires Jacobians.
Look at math 309 and 431 here: https://math.wisc.edu/undergraduate/courses-enrollment/probability-courses/
That page is specifically for math majors and minors/certificates, not engineering.
Statistics for Engineering is 324 or 371.
https://guide.wisc.edu/courses/stat/
OP asked if AP Stat requires Multi. AP Stat is equivalent to 301, if we go by Wisc. worldview, it requires Quant Reasoning. No idea what that is?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not 100% false. There are mathematical statistics courses which require multi. Joint, marginal, and conditional probability density functions require multiple integration. Change of variables requires Jacobians.
Look at math 309 and 431 here: https://math.wisc.edu/undergraduate/courses-enrollment/probability-courses/
That page is specifically for math majors and minors/certificates, not engineering.
Statistics for Engineering is 324 or 371.
https://guide.wisc.edu/courses/stat/
Anonymous wrote:Any statistics course beyond the most basic freshman stats class requires linear algebra.
Beyond that, a kid aiming at an engineering major needs to take Calc BC in high school if their school offers it. Without that, the counselor won't be able to indicate that the student is pursuing the most rigorous curriculum, and without that, it will be hard to get into an engineering program.
Anonymous wrote:Not 100% false. There are mathematical statistics courses which require multi. Joint, marginal, and conditional probability density functions require multiple integration. Change of variables requires Jacobians.
Look at math 309 and 431 here: https://math.wisc.edu/undergraduate/courses-enrollment/probability-courses/