Statement of the Problem
Designing the experiment
We
hypothesized that as students progressed through their high
school career they would become more health conscious about
their lifestyles. We proceeded to plan an
experiment that could be used to find an association between
class and health conscientiousness. We
designed a survey that consisted of 2 questions: what is
your class level?, and, how health conscientious are you?
The possible answers presented to the student
concerning class level were freshmen, sophomore, junior, and
senior. The possible answers presented to
the student concerning health conscientiousness were below
average, average, and above average. Once
the survey was designed we needed a sample to survey.
We chose the complete student body at
Analyzing the Experiment
After the surveys were mailed out, we simply waited for the
results to trickle back to our classroom for analysis. After 3
days of waiting for surveys to return, 121 of the 142 surveys
mailed out were returned. We then input the data into Minitab
software in order to run analyses on the data. Initially, we
ran a chi-squared test using a 4x3 contingency table of all 4
class levels and the 3 levels of health conscientiousness. The
results were inconclusive, as some expected cell counts were
significantly too low. We proceeded to group the freshmen and
sophomores into one group, underclassmen, and the juniors and
the seniors into one group, upperclassmen. These two new groups
served the same purpose of distinguishing one group as older.
Another chi-squared test was run on our new 2x3 contingency
table, and results were still inconclusive. Our expected values
were still below 5 for some cells, but they were relatively
close enough to 5 that some reasonable conclusions could be
drawn. Even though we had two expected values below 5, because
our “below average” column did not have enough respondents, we
still analyzed our p-value. Our chi-squared test resulted in a
p-value of 0.351 which led us to reject our null hypothesis that
an association between class level and health conscientiousness
existed. Our p-value caused us to fail to reject our null
hypothesis at all reasonable levels ofsignificance. There was
no significant evidence to suggest an association between class
level and health conscientiousness. Further testing with a
larger sample would yield more accurate results, but we predict
the findings would be relatively similar to our test, at least
in the