Statement of purpose and question - (your response goes here) Population of Interest - (your response goes here Develop a question(s) - Develop a question that is of interest to you and that you believe you can get answers to if you ask a typical person in your population of interest.  Determine your population of interest - This is the population that you would like to understand. Your population of interest may be your community (you must specify exactly what qualifies as your community), Renton, Seattle, King County, Washington State, U.S., or any other part of the world. Create a sampling frame - For this project this means that you determine how you will collect your data. Will you use a representative list from which you will make random calls? Will you sample a representative block or two of some representative neighborhood (as in a cluster sample)? You should just give a plausible source from which the data could be obtained. Sample correctly  Check the conditions for inference - Make sure to check the conditions and assumptions for the type of confidence interval you are creating.  Create a confidence interval - create a 95% confidence interval that addresses your question.  Analyze - Create a summary of the results of your data. In other words, tell the reader of your study (your survey) what the data says in relation to your original question. You will do this by showing the reader your confidence interval, and correctly interpreting the interval. Assemble the results from the above seven steps into a report  Statement of purpose and question - State what it is you are trying to determine. State your question. Population of interest - Which group are you interested in. Sampling frame - Tell the reader where you might have sampled from, and why you think that location is representative of your population of interest. Remember, we will not be canvassing people. Sampling Issues - Think about any problems with bias that might arise from, phrasing of the question, non-response issues, or anything else that you think could have influenced the outcome of your results. Assumptions and Conditions - Make a check-list of assumptions and conditions. Raw data, computations, and resulting confidence interval - Present the data that you were given, and show the computations for the confidence interval by showing the key-strokes on your TI-84 or Excel. Summary and conclusion - State your conclusion, and note anything important in the design, implementation, or analysis of the procedures that might bear on your conclusion.

Glencoe Algebra 1, Student Edition, 9780079039897, 0079039898, 2018
18th Edition
ISBN:9780079039897
Author:Carter
Publisher:Carter
Chapter4: Equations Of Linear Functions
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 5PFA
Question

Statement of purpose and question - (your response goes here)

Population of Interest - (your response goes here

  1. Develop a question(s) - Develop a question that is of interest to you and that you believe you can get answers to if you ask a typical person in your population of interest. 
  2. Determine your population of interest - This is the population that you would like to understand. Your population of interest may be your community (you must specify exactly what qualifies as your community), Renton, Seattle, King County, Washington State, U.S., or any other part of the world.
  3. Create a sampling frame - For this project this means that you determine how you will collect your data. Will you use a representative list from which you will make random calls? Will you sample a representative block or two of some representative neighborhood (as in a cluster sample)? You should just give a plausible source from which the data could be obtained.
  4. Sample correctly 
  5. Check the conditions for inference - Make sure to check the conditions and assumptions for the type of confidence interval you are creating. 
  6. Create a confidence interval - create a 95% confidence interval that addresses your question. 
  7. Analyze - Create a summary of the results of your data. In other words, tell the reader of your study (your survey) what the data says in relation to your original question. You will do this by showing the reader your confidence interval, and correctly interpreting the interval.
  8. Assemble the results from the above seven steps into a report 
  • Statement of purpose and question - State what it is you are trying to determine. State your question.
  • Population of interest - Which group are you interested in.
  • Sampling frame - Tell the reader where you might have sampled from, and why you think that location is representative of your population of interest. Remember, we will not be canvassing people.
  • Sampling Issues - Think about any problems with bias that might arise from, phrasing of the question, non-response issues, or anything else that you think could have influenced the outcome of your results.
  • Assumptions and Conditions - Make a check-list of assumptions and conditions.
  • Raw data, computations, and resulting confidence interval - Present the data that you were given, and show the computations for the confidence interval by showing the key-strokes on your TI-84 or Excel.
  • Summary and conclusion - State your conclusion, and note anything important in the design, implementation, or analysis of the procedures that might bear on your conclusion.
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