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AP Statistics Unit III Test Review (Clickers)

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Presentation on theme: "AP Statistics Unit III Test Review (Clickers)"— Presentation transcript:

1 AP Statistics Unit III Test Review (Clickers)
Objective: Prepare for the Unit III Individual Test tomorrow

2 Please select a Team. Team 1 Team 2 Team 4 Team 5 Team 6

3 A company sponsoring a new Internet search engine wants to collect data on the ease of using it. Which is the best way to collect the data? A) census B) sample survey C) observational study D) experiment E) simulation

4 A) I only B) II only C) III only D) I and II E) I, II, and III
The January 2005 Gallup Youth Survey telephoned a random sample of 1,028 U.S. teens and asked these teens to name their favorite movie from Napoleon Dynamite had the highest percentage with 8% of teens ranking it as their favorite movie. Which is true? A) I only B) II only C) III only D) I and II E) I, II, and III

5 Participant Scores 2 Linsea P Brendan O. John C. Kiera S 1 Liz M

6 Suppose your local school district decides to randomly test high school students for attention deficit disorder (ADD). There are three high schools in the district, each with grades The school board pools all of the students together and randomly samples 250 students. Is this a simple random sample? A) Yes, because the students were chosen at random. B) Yes, because each student is equally likely to be chosen. C) Yes, because they could have chosen any 250 students from throughout the district. D) No, because we can’t guarantee that there are students from each school in the sample. E) No, because we can’t guarantee that there are students from each grade in the sample.

7 I only II only III only II & III only I, II, & III
A basketball player has a 70% free throw percentage. Which plan could be used to simulate the number of free throws she will make in her next five free throw attempts? I only II only III only II & III only I, II, & III

8 Team MVP Points Team Participant 4 Team 6 Brendan O. Team 4 John C. 3
Emily C. 2 Team 1 Spencer M 1 Team 2 Andrew N

9 A chemistry professor who teaches a large lecture class surveys his students who attend his class about how he can make the class more interesting, hoping he can get more students to attend. This survey method suffers from A) voluntary response bias B) nonresponse bias C) response bias D) undercoverage E) None of the above

10 A) randomized experiment B) survey C) prospective study
More dogs are being diagnosed with thyroid problems than have been diagnosed in the past. A researcher identified 50 puppies without thyroid problems and kept records of their diets for several years to see if any developed thyroid problems. This is a(n) A) randomized experiment B) survey C) prospective study D) retrospective study E) blocked experiment

11 Fastest Responders (in seconds)
7.64 Andrew N 12.1 Linsea P 13.33 Amanda Z. 13.53 Chris D. 14.1 Brendan O.

12 A) is completely randomized.
A researcher wants to compare the effect of a new type of shampoo on hair condition. The researcher believes that men and women may react to the shampoo differently. Additionally, the researcher believes that the shampoo will react differently on hair that is dyed. The subjects are split into four groups: men who dye their hair; men who do not dye their hair; women who dye their hair; women who do not dye their hair. Subjects in each group are randomly assigned to the new shampoo and the old shampoo. This experiment A) is completely randomized. B) has three factors (shampoo type, gender, whether hair is dyed). 3. C) has two factors (gender and whether hair is dyed) blocked by shampoo type. 4. D) has two factors (shampoo type and whether hair is dyed) blocked by gender 5. E) has one factor (shampoo type), blocked by gender and whether hair is dyed

13 A consumer group wants to see if a new education program will improve the spending habits of college students. Students in an economics class are randomly assigned to three different courses on spending habits. What are the experimental units? The new education program Three different courses The spending habits of college students The consumer group The students in the economics class

14 Participant Scores 8 Brendan O. 7 Emily C. 6 Linsea P 5 Kiera S
Besty A.

15 A consumer group wants to see if a new education program will improve the spending habits of college students. Students in an economics class are randomly assigned to three different courses on spending habits. How many factors are there & How many treatments are there? 3 factors; 1 treatment One factor; 1 treatment Three factors; 3 treatments One factor; 3 treatments Not enough information to determine

16 A consumer group wants to see if a new education program will improve the spending habits of college students. Students in an economics class are randomly assigned to three different courses on spending habits. What is the response variable? The spending habits of the students The new education program Three different courses The consumer group The students in the economics class

17 Team MVP Points Team Participant

18 Which is important in designing a good experiment?
A) I only B) I and II C) I and III D) II and III E) all three

19 . .

20 Fastest Responders (in seconds)
Participant 1 Participant 2 Participant 3 Participant 4 Participant 5

21 A recent experiment evaluated elementary age children for aggressiveness. The experiment found that the children who played video games were more likely to engage in aggressive or violent play at school. The researchers said the difference was statistically significant. Explain what “statistically significant” means in this context. The difference in aggressiveness was the same as random variation might reasonably be expected to produce. The difference in aggressiveness was greater than random variation might reasonably be expected to produce. The difference in aggressiveness was less than random variation might reasonably be expected to produce. No response above is complete

22 Participant Scores Participant 1 Participant 2 Participant 3
Participant 1 Participant 2 Participant 3 Participant 4 Participant 5

23 Researchers believe that a new drug called Bone Builder will help bones heal after children have broken or fractured a bone. The researchers believe that Bone Builder will work differently on bone breaks than on bone fractures, because of differences in initial bone condition. Bone Builder will be used in conjunction with traditional casts. To test the impact of Bone Builder on bone healing, the researchers recruit 18 children with bone breaks and 30 children with bone fractures. Design an appropriate experiment to determine if Bone Builder will help bones heal.


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