51% of parents of children in high school felt it was aserious problem that high schoo
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Twenty years ago, 51% of parents of children in high school felt it was aserious problem that high school students were not being taught
enough math and science. A recent survey found that 232 of 700
parents of children in high school felt it was a serious problem that high
school students were not being taught enough math and science. Do
parents feel differently today than they did twenty years ago? Use the
α = 0.1 level of significance
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- Twenty years ago, 52% of parents of children in high school felt it was a serious problem that high school students were not being taught enough math and science. A recent survey found that 297 of 850 parents of children in high school felt it was a serious problem that high school students were not being taught enough math and science. Do parents feel differently today than they did twenty years ago? Use the a = 0.1 level of significance. Because npo (1- Po) =L V 10, the sample size is V 5% of the population size, and the sample the requirements for testing the hypothesis V satisfied. (Round to one decimal place as needed.)In 1990, 58% of Americans 18 years old and older reported they have a great deal of concern regarding air pollution. A recent poll found that 592 of 1004 Americans 18 years old or older stated that they have a great deal of concern regarding the level of air pollution in American. Is there evidence to conclude that the current proportion of Americans having a great deal of concern about the level of air pollution in America is different from the 1990 proportion, with a 10% level of significance? State the null hypothesis, alternative hypothesis, test statistic, p-value and conclusion.Twenty years ago, 53% of parents of children in high school felt it was a serious problem that high school students were not being taught enough math and science. A recent survey found that 327 of 900 parents of children in high school felt it was a serious problem that high school students were not being taught enough math and science. Do parents feel differently today than they did twenty years ago? Use the a = 0.01 level of significance. Because npo (1-Po) =O > 10, the sample size is less than 5% of the population size, and the sample can be reasonably assumed to be random, the requirements for testing the hypothesis satisfied. are (Round to one decimal place as needed.)
- Twenty years ago, 57% of parents of children in high school felt it was a serious problem that high school students were not being taught enough math and science. A recent survey found that 244 of 700 parents of children in h was a serious problem that high school students were not being taught enough math and science. Do parents feel differently today than they did twenty years ago? Use the a= 0.1 level of significance. Because npo (1-pPo) =U 10, the sample size is V 5% of the population size, and the sample the requirements for testing the hypothesis satisfied. (Round to one decimal place as needed.) What are the null and alternative hypotheses? V versus H,: Ho: (Type integers or decimals. Do not round.) Find the test statistic. Z, = (Round to two decimal places as needed.) Find the P-value. P-value = (Round to three decimal places as needed.) Determine the conclusion for this hypothesis test. Choose the correct answer below. O A. Since P-value a, reject the null hypothesis and…OSE 2 Researchers conducted a study to estimate the relationship between a subject's brain activity while watching a television commercial and subject's subsequent ability to recall the contents of commercials. People think that long commercial recall is remembered by the people compared with the short one. In order to understand the difference researcher made 10 long commercial and a short one for each products and commercials are watched by the same person. Then subjects are asked what they remembered from the commercial and giving the correct answers are codded by the following table. 1 2345678910 Long Commercial Recall 108668 9786 Short Commercial Recall 4 23444462 2 Ce Test the claim that long commercials recall is more than short one (The duration of the commercial make a difference to recall). Calculate the test statistics. Maksimum 3900 karakter yazabilirsiniz.The U.S. Department of Transportation, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, reported that 77% of all fatally injured automobile drivers were intoxicated. A random sample of 52 records of automobile driver fatalities in a certain county showed that 33 involved an intoxicated driver. Do these data indicate that the population proportion of driver fatalities related to alcohol is less than 77% in Kit Carson County? Use ? = 0.05. (a) level of significance: .05 | H0: p = 0.77; H1: p < 0.77 (b) The standard normal, since np > 5 and nq > 5. What is the value of the sample test statistic? (Round your answer to two decimal places.) Find the P-value of the test statistic. (Round your answer to four decimal places.)
- A Verizon researcher compared the number of text messages sent by a sample of teenage boys to the population mean for all Verizon users. She found no evidence to conclude that there was a difference. Unfortunately, her conclusion was in error. (a) What type of error did she make? (b) What conclusion should she have reached?In a recent poll six hundred adults were asked a series of questions about the state ofthe economy and their children’s future. One question was, “do you expect your children to have a better life than you have had, a worse life, or a life about the same asyours?” The responses showed 242 better, 310 worse, and 48 about the same. Use thesign test and a =.05 to determine whether there is a difference between the number ofadults who feel their children will have a better life compared to a worse life. What isyour conclusion?According to the Humane Society, 33% of households in the United States own at least one cat. You are interested in determining whether the proportion of households of the students at your school that own at least one cat is different from the national proportion. Suppose you survey an SRS of students at your school and find that 25% of them own cats, which yields a p-value of .092. Interpret this p-value.
- Support for the U.S. death penalty for convicted murderers was 63% in 2014 (Gallup poll results 2018). In a recent survey of 150 randomly selected U.S. adults, 75 said they were in favor of the death penalty for those convicted of murder. Does this sample appear to come from a population with a lower proportion in favor of the death penalty? d) Say that a = 0.05, what does this mean. Explain in the context of the problem. e) What would it mean to make a type II error? Explain in the context of this problem. f) Use a 0.05 significance level to test the claim. State your conclusion AND interpret your results.Management of a theater in a large city wants to know whether its popularity increased after it ran a popular musical. According to a previous study, 25% of city residents said they had been to the theater in the past year. A more recent study, conducted after the musical had run for a year, found that 156 of 536 residents sampled said they had been to the theater in the past year. Is there evidence at the ? = 0.05 level that the number of residents who have been to the theater has increased in the last year?Can you find and show the p-value for this question?