Name the sampling method used in each of the following situations: a. A woman in the airport is handing out questionnaires to travelers asking them to evaluate the airport’s service. She does not ask travelers who ate hurrying through the airport with their hands full of luggage. but instead asks all travelers who are sitting near gates and not taking naps while they wait. b. A teacher wants to know if her students are doing homework, so she randomly selects rows two and five and then calls on all students in row two and all students in row five to present the solutions to homework problems to the class. c. The marketing manager for an electronics chain store wants information about the ages of its customers. Over the next two weeks, at each store location, 100 randomly selected customers are given questionnaires to fill out asking for information about age, as well as about other variables of interest. d. The librarian at a public library wants to determine what proportion of the library users are children. The librarian has a tally sheet on which she marks whether books are checked out by an adult or a child. She records this data for every fourth patron who checks out books. e. A political part ants to know the reaction of voters to a debate between the candidates. The day after the debate. the party’s polling staff calls 1,200 randomly selected phone numbers. If a registered voter answers the phone or is available to come to the phone, that registered voter is asked whom he or she intends to vote for and whether the debate changed his or her opinion of the candidates.
Name the sampling method used in each of the following situations: a. A woman in the airport is handing out questionnaires to travelers asking them to evaluate the airport’s service. She does not ask travelers who ate hurrying through the airport with their hands full of luggage. but instead asks all travelers who are sitting near gates and not taking naps while they wait. b. A teacher wants to know if her students are doing homework, so she randomly selects rows two and five and then calls on all students in row two and all students in row five to present the solutions to homework problems to the class. c. The marketing manager for an electronics chain store wants information about the ages of its customers. Over the next two weeks, at each store location, 100 randomly selected customers are given questionnaires to fill out asking for information about age, as well as about other variables of interest. d. The librarian at a public library wants to determine what proportion of the library users are children. The librarian has a tally sheet on which she marks whether books are checked out by an adult or a child. She records this data for every fourth patron who checks out books. e. A political part ants to know the reaction of voters to a debate between the candidates. The day after the debate. the party’s polling staff calls 1,200 randomly selected phone numbers. If a registered voter answers the phone or is available to come to the phone, that registered voter is asked whom he or she intends to vote for and whether the debate changed his or her opinion of the candidates.
Name the sampling method used in each of the following situations:
a. A woman in the airport is handing out questionnaires to travelers asking them to evaluate the airport’s service. She does not ask travelers who ate hurrying through the airport with their hands full of luggage. but instead asks all travelers who are sitting near gates and not taking naps while they wait.
b. A teacher wants to know if her students are doing homework, so she randomly selects rows two and five and then calls on all students in row two and all students in row five to present the solutions to homework problems to the class.
c. The marketing manager for an electronics chain store wants information about the ages of its customers. Over the next two weeks, at each store location, 100 randomly selected customers are given questionnaires to fill out asking for information about age, as well as about other variables of interest.
d. The librarian at a public library wants to determine what proportion of the library users are children. The librarian has a tally sheet on which she marks whether books are checked out by an adult or a child. She records this data for every fourth patron who checks out books.
e. A political part ants to know the reaction of voters to a debate between the candidates. The day after the debate. the party’s polling staff calls 1,200 randomly selected phone numbers. If a registered voter answers the phone or is available to come to the phone, that registered voter is asked whom he or she intends to vote for and whether the debate changed his or her opinion of the candidates.
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Part (b)
Draw a scatter plot of the ordered pairs.
N
Life
Expectancy
Life
Expectancy
80
70
600
50
40
30
20
10
Year of
1950
1970 1990
2010 Birth
O
Life
Expectancy
Part (c)
800
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
1950
1970 1990
W
ALT
林
$
#
4
R
J7
Year of
2010 Birth
F6
4+
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
Year of
1950 1970 1990
2010 Birth
Life
Expectancy
Ox
800
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
Year of
1950 1970 1990 2010 Birth
hp
P.B.
KA
&
7
80
% 5
H
A
B
F10
711
N
M
K
744
PRT SC
ALT
CTRL
Harvard University
California Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Stanford University
Princeton University
University of Cambridge
University of Oxford
University of California, Berkeley
Imperial College London
Yale University
University of California, Los Angeles
University of Chicago
Johns Hopkins University
Cornell University
ETH Zurich
University of Michigan
University of Toronto
Columbia University
University of Pennsylvania
Carnegie Mellon University
University of Hong Kong
University College London
University of Washington
Duke University
Northwestern University
University of Tokyo
Georgia Institute of Technology
Pohang University of Science and Technology
University of California, Santa Barbara
University of British Columbia
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
University of California, San Diego
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
National University of Singapore
McGill…
Name
Harvard University
California Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Stanford University
Princeton University
University of Cambridge
University of Oxford
University of California, Berkeley
Imperial College London
Yale University
University of California, Los Angeles
University of Chicago
Johns Hopkins University
Cornell University
ETH Zurich
University of Michigan
University of Toronto
Columbia University
University of Pennsylvania
Carnegie Mellon University
University of Hong Kong
University College London
University of Washington
Duke University
Northwestern University
University of Tokyo
Georgia Institute of Technology
Pohang University of Science and Technology
University of California, Santa Barbara
University of British Columbia
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
University of California, San Diego
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
National University of Singapore…
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