TITLE: 
                        
                            Overcoming Statistical Helplessness and Developing Statistical Resilience in Learners: An Illustrative, Collaborative, Phenomenological Study
                                
                                
                                    AUTHORS: 
                                            Sue Johnston-Wilder, Janet Goodall, Hani Almehrz 
                                                    
                                                        KEYWORDS: 
                        Statistical Resilience, Statistics Anxiety, Learned Helplessness, Growth Zone Model, Emancipation, Agency 
                                                    
                                                    
                                                        JOURNAL NAME: 
                        Creative Education,  
                        Vol.9 No.7, 
                        June
                                                        21,
                        2018
                                                    
                                                    
                                                        ABSTRACT: Many people suffer from statistics anxiety or helplessness in the UK; this is true even in the context of PhD students studying at prestigious universities. There is a risk that anxiety or helplessness results in students avoiding engagement with statistics, and consequent underachievement. Here, we illustrate the application of the construct “statistical resilience” to developing positive engagement in statistics. We used the method of a collaborative phenomenological study. The collaboration is between a researcher and a PhD student acting as a research assistant. The relevant concepts include learned helplessness, self-agency and statistical resilience. As the PhD student gained statistical resilience, he was able to leave behind learned helplessness. This resulted in emancipation from statistical anxiety, an effective contribution to a research project, raised self-esteem and increased ability to engage with formal statistical thinking. The paper ends with recommendations for policy and practice.