The Eye

Sampling

    I was given a list of all of the students at North Olmsted High School which was accessible with Minitab. Using the Minitab random number generator, I randomly selected 150 students from the entire student body at NOHS, my population of interest (Command: Calc; Random Data; Sample from columns).  I then put my results, or student names, into alphabetical order so that it was easier for me to find how to contact them (Command: Manip; Sort).  After I obtained a list of all of the names, I printed 150 copies of my survey.  I went to the Guidance office and found each individual’s first period class, teacher, and room number.  I placed each student’s name, period of availability, teacher, and room number on sticky notes and sent them to the office for distribution.  If a student was discovered to go to Polaris, band, or gym first period, I used a different period and sent it to that teacher.  If a student went to Polaris full time or did not visit the school building at all during the day, then I was not able to contact them; therefore, they contributed to the response bias.  The participation survey that students were asked to complete looked like this:

________________________________________________________________________

BJ

For each of the following questions, check the box of the statement that best describes you.

 

How would you rate your participation in English class?

___ I never participate

___ I rarely participate

___ I participate sometimes

___ I participate most of the time

___ I always participate

 

How would you rate your participation in Math class?

___ I never participate

___ I rarely participate

___ I participate sometimes

___ I participate most of the time

___ I always participate

 

Chi-squared test for homogeneity

Ho:  the true proportions Amath, Bmath, Cmath, Dmath, and Emath are equal to Aenglish, Benglish, Cenglish, Denglish, and Eenglish, respectively

Ha:  the true proportions Amath, Bmath, Cmath, Dmath, and Emath are not equal to Aenglish, Benglish, Cenglish, Denglish, and Eenglish, respectively

Alpha: 0.05

Eq1401.jpg (4619 bytes)

Observed Values:

CLASS

NeverParticipate

RarelyParticipate

ParticipateSometimes

ParticipateMostOfTheTime

AlwaysParticipate

 

English

5

11

28

39

23

 

math

10

15

34

31

16

 

Corresponding Expected Values:

Expected Values Matrix

 

 

 

 

7.5

13

31

35

19.5

7.5

13

31

35

19.5

 

All values are greater than five - x² test will uphold

df = 4

x² = 5.033392414

p-value = .2838883546

We fail to reject the null hypothesis at any reasonable level of significance because our p-value is greater than alpha.  Therefore, there is insufficient evidence to conclude that the true proportions Amath, Bmath, Cmath, Dmath, and Emath are equal to Aenglish, Benglish, Cenglish, Denglish, and Eenglish, respectively.

Data

Graphs