Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

100 200 300 400 Chapter 2Chapter 3Chapter 4Chapter 5 AP Statistics Jeopardy Chapter 1 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "100 200 300 400 Chapter 2Chapter 3Chapter 4Chapter 5 AP Statistics Jeopardy Chapter 1 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 100 200 300 400 Chapter 2Chapter 3Chapter 4Chapter 5 AP Statistics Jeopardy Chapter 1 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 RULES OF THE GAME Final Jeopardy Question

3 Chapter 1 - 100 Answer The 5 number summary consists of these 5 pieces of data:

4 Chapter 1 - 200 Answer Potential outliers are found by using 1.5(IQR) and then adding and subtracting that to the mean. TRUE or FALSE

5 Chapter 1 - 300 Answer If the graph of data is heavy on the right and light on the left it is considered to be skewed _______?

6 Chapter 1 - 400 Answer What is the defining characteristic of an Ogive?

7 Chapter 1 - 500 Answer If 74% of y is due to x, what is the correlation?

8 Chapter 1 - 100 Answer The 5 number summary consists of these 5 pieces of data: 1.Minimum 2.Quartile 1 3.Median 4.Quartile 3 5.Maximum

9 False- You add and subtract IQR from Q1 and Q3 Chapter 1 - 200 Answer

10 Left Chapter 1 - 300 Answer

11 It is a cumulative frequency graph, so it adds up to 100% Chapter 1 - 400 Answer

12 Positive or Negative.86 Chapter 1 - 500 Answer

13 Chapter 2 - 100 Answer The median, mode, IQR, and the quartiles are all resistant. TRUE or FALSE

14 Chapter 2 - 200 Answer How can you test to see if data is normal? Name 3 different ways-

15 Chapter 2 - 300 Answer When undergoing a linear transformation, what part of the y=mx+b equation do you drop for finding the IQR and Standard Deviation?

16 Chapter 2 - 400 Answer Women’s heights follow a N(64.5, 2.5). What percentile is a female in if she is 62 inches tall?

17 Chapter 2 - 500 Answer Women’s heights follow N(64.5, 2.5), 68% of women would fall between 62 and 67 inches tall? TRUE or FALSE

18 True Chapter 2 - 100 Answer

19 Normal probability plot, box plot, bell curve, if mean and median are close Chapter 2 - 200 Answer

20 +b Chapter 2 - 300 Answer

21 16 th percentile Chapter 2 - 400 Answer

22 True Chapter 2 - 500 Answer

23 Given the information above, find the slope of the least squares regression Line. Chapter 3 - 100 Answer

24 Chapter 3 - 200 Answer Residual is the predicted value minus the observed value. TRUE or FALSE

25 Chapter 3 - 300 Answer If two events are disjoint, then they can’t be independent. TRUE or FALSE

26 Chapter 3 - 400 Answer Taking the log of the x values of an exponential equation straightens out the line and can then be used for interpolating. TRUE or FALSE

27 Name 3 types of bias: Chapter 3 - 500 Answer

28 1.064 Chapter 3 - 100 Answer

29 False Chapter 3 - 200 Answer

30 True Chapter 3 - 300 Answer

31 False - log of the y-values Chapter 3 - 400 Answer

32 Voluntary Bias, Convenience sampling, Non-Response, Response, Wording, Under Coverage Chapter 3 - 500 Answer

33 Chapter 4 - 100 Answer Name a type of sampling design:

34 Chapter 4 - 200 WHAT HAPPENS?

35 Chapter 4 - 300 Answer P(A & B) = P(A)*P(B) if the two events are independent, otherwise P(A&B) = P(A) * P(B | A). TRUE or FALSE

36 Chapter 4 - 400 Answer TRUE or FALSE

37 Chapter 4 - 500 Answer If P(A&B) = 0, then what is true?

38 SRS, Systematic, Multistage, Stratified, Census, Block, Matched Pairs Chapter 4 - 100 Answer

39 Chapter 4 - 200 Answer Each group rolls the die, then multiply your number by 100 and subtract that from your score.

40 True Chapter 4 - 300 Answer

41 False Chapter 4 - 400 Answer

42 The events are disjoint Chapter 4 - 500 Answer

43 Chapter 5 - 100 Answer P(A or B) = P(A)+P(B) – P(A or B) TRUE or FALSE

44 Chapter 5 - 200 Answer Pantico has applied to both the U of M and St. Thomas University. He thinks the probability of getting into the U of M is about.8, the probability that UST will admit him is about.4, and the probability both will admit him is.3. What is the probability he is thoroughly disappointed because neither accepted him?

45 Chapter 5 - 300

46 Define Mutually Exclusive Chapter 5 - 400 Answer

47 According to the empirical rule, what percentage of data will be within 3 Standard deviations of the mean? Chapter 5 - 500 Answer

48 False Chapter 5 - 100 Answer

49 .1 Chapter 5 - 200 Answer

50 Chapter 5 - 300 Answer Yum Yum….!

51 Two events that can’t happen at the same time Chapter 5 - 400 Answer

52 99.7% Chapter 5 - 500 Answer

53 Chapter 6 - 100 Chapter 6 - 100 Answer

54 Chapter 6 - 200 Chapter 6 - 200 Answer

55 Chapter 6 - 300 Chapter 6 - 300 Answer

56 Chapter 6 - 400 Chapter 6 - 400 Answer

57 Chapter 6 - 500 Chapter 6 - 500 Answer

58 Chapter 6 - 100 Answer Chapter 6 - 100 Answer

59 Chapter 6 - 200 Answer Chapter 6 - 200 Answer

60 Chapter 6 - 300 Answer Chapter 6 - 300 Answer

61 Chapter 6 - 400 Answer Chapter 6 - 400 Answer

62 Chapter 6 - 500 Answer Chapter 6 - 500 Answer

63 Final Jeopardy Put down your bet. If you are in the negative, the most you can place is the same amount you are negative. For example, if your current score is -1200 points then you can bet up to 1200 points to try and break even. Go to the Question Go to the Question

64 Final Jeopardy Question Answer Two players compete against each other by rolling dice--not the traditional dice, though. One face of Hank's die has an 8 and the other five faces are all 2's. Jack's die has four 3's and two 1's on the six faces. They each roll their die, and the player with the highest score wins. Which player has the advantage – Give the name and their probability of winning.

65 Final Jeopardy Answer P[J wins] = P[H gets 2]*P[J gets 3] = [5/6][4/6] = 20/36 = 5/9 P[H wins] = 1 - 5/9 = 4/9 So Jack has the advantage 822222 3HJJJJJ 3HJJJJJ 3HJJJJJ 3HJJJJJ 1HHHHHH 1HHHHHH

66 Rules -Break students into groups of 4 and pick a captain -Each group needs a white board, marker, eraser - The group with the person whose birthday is closest to finals gets to start by picking a category and # points -I click on the category button and the students answer the question on the mini white board in the allotted time -Each group that answers correctly gets to have their captain add the points on the big white board under their team’s name -If the group answer is wrong, then they lose those points from their total so far -A new person in the group gets the mini white board (and it is rotated after every round) - the only tool they can use is the College Board packet -Watch out for the Irishman! If you click this you all lose points (100 times the roll of a die). -There might a delicious game piece just waiting with your name on it!


Download ppt "100 200 300 400 Chapter 2Chapter 3Chapter 4Chapter 5 AP Statistics Jeopardy Chapter 1 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google