Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Statistical Evaluation

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Statistical Evaluation"— Presentation transcript:

1 Statistical Evaluation
Chapter 2, section 3 Angelo and Maria Gallina won two California lottery games on the same day. DID YOU KNOW? An event that happens to “one in a billion” people occurs about seven times a day, 2555 times a year.

2 Descriptive Statistics
Describes sets of data. You might create a frequency distribution. Frequency polygons or histograms.

3 Describing Data A meaningful description of data is important in research. Misrepresentation may lead to incorrect conclusions. OBJECTIVE 16| Explain how graphs can misrepresent data.

4 Measures of Central Tendency
Mean: The arithmetic average of scores in a distribution obtained by adding the scores and then dividing by the number of scores that were added together. Mode: The most frequently occurring score in a distribution. Median: The middle score in a rank-ordered distribution. DID YOU KNOW? The average person has one ovary and one testicle. OBJECTIVE 17| Describe three measures of central tendency and tell which is most affected by extreme scores.

5 Central Tendency Watch out for extreme scores or outliers.
Let’s look at the salaries of the employees at Dunder Mifflen Paper in Scranton: $25,000 - Pam $25,000 - Kevin $25,000 - Angela $100,000 - Andy $100,000 - Dwight $200,000 - Jim $300,000 - Michael Find the Mean, Mode, and Median?

6 Normal Distribution In a normal distribution, the mean, median and mode are all the same.

7 Normal Distribution

8 Measures of Central Tendency
What if our mode, mean, and median aren’t all the same? Then we have a Skewed Distribution

9 Distributions Outliers skew distributions.
If group has one high score, the curve has a positive skew (contains more low scores) If a group has a low outlier, the curve has a negative skew (contains more high scores)

10 Measures of Variation Range: The difference between the highest and lowest scores in a distribution. Sometimes can be misleading, though. Look at these scoring charts: 20 pts. 47 pts. 48 pts. 49 pts. 49 pts. 49 pts. 50 pts. 50 pts. 20 pts. 21 pts. 21 pts. 22 pts. 23 pts. 24 pts. 24 pts. 25 pts. 26 pts. 50 pts. Find the Range? Would you agree they have the same range? But the data sets are actually quite different. OBJECTIVE 18| Explain two measures of variation. LeBron James Derrick Rose

11 Measures of Variation A better measure of variation is to calculate standard deviation… Standard Deviation: A computed measure of how much scores vary around the mean. The higher the variance or SD, the more spread out the distribution is. OBJECTIVE 18| Explain two measures of variation.

12 Inferential Statistics
The purpose is to discover whether the finding can be applied to the larger population from which the sample was collected. Does the findings support the hypoethsis? Therefore, we need to conduct tests to see if our data is actually meaningful or could our results have been due to chance alone? We won’t compute that formula in this class…but if you take stats you will!!  Do the results of the sample apply to the rest of the population?

13 Read the handout on ethics and answer the guided questions
Ethics Reading Read the handout on ethics and answer the guided questions

14 Ethics Research Assignment
Directions- Using the website listed above, each person inside your group will research 1 of the 10 unethical experiments and complete the chart. Then in a jigsaw, each person will discuss the following questions and fill in their charts Name of Experiment Psychologist Involved Brief Description of Research What makes the Experiment unethical? How can you change it to make it ethical?

15 Name of Experiment Research
Psychologists and/or Sociologists Involved in Research Brief Description of Experiment/Research What Makes the Experiment/Research Unethical? How Could You Change it to Make it Ethical?

16 Groups 1- Colin, Maisha, Victoria, Jahlen, Jonah
2-Quintavius, Meredith, Sam, Abby, Connor 3- Jun, Davis, Diante, Jasmine, Lauren B. 4- Tyler, Elias, Kayleigh, Kaleb, Brandon 5- Ian, Yessika, Lauren N., Desya, Kepha


Download ppt "Statistical Evaluation"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google