Statistical Analysis/Unit 5 Content

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Unit 5[edit | edit source]

This content is adapted from the Introduction to Statistics MA121/ECON104 Course at Saylor.org.

Subunit 5.1: Hypothesis Testing: Single Mean and Single Proportion[edit | edit source]

Null and Alternate Hypotheses[edit | edit source]

  • Readings: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 9: Hypothesis Testing: Single Mean and Single Proportion”

Instructions: Please read each of the linked sections above in their entirety.

Terms of Use: Please respect the copyright and terms of use displayed on the webpages.

Type I and Type II Errors[edit | edit source]

  • Readings: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 9: Hypothesis Testing: Single Mean and Single Proportion"

Instructions: Please read the entire webpage in its entirety.

  • Lecture: Khan Academy’s Statistics

Instructions: Please watch the brief video lecture (3:24 minutes). This lecture will discuss Type 1 Errors.

Terms of Use: Please respect the copyright and terms of use displayed on the webpage displayed above.

Distribution for Hypothesis Testing and More[edit | edit source]

Video Lecture 9: Hypothesis Testing with a Single Mean
  • Readings: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 9: Hypothesis Testing: Single Mean and Single Proportion”

Instructions: Please read each of the linked sections above in their entirety.

  • Lecture: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Video Lecture 9: Hypothesis Testing with a Single Mean”

Instructions: Please view the lecture to the right in its entirety.

  • Assignment: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 9: Hypothesis Testing: Single Mean and Single Proportion”

Instructions: Click on the hyperlinks titled “Practice 1: Single Mean, Known Population Standard Deviation,” “Practice 2: Single Mean, Unknown Population Standard Deviation,” and “Practice 3: Single Proportion” and solve the problems. Next, click on the hyperlink titled “Homework” and solve problems 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 27. Please click on “[ Show Solution ]” link below the problem to check your solution.

  • Lecture: Khan Academy’s Statistics

Instructions: Please view the entire video lecture (14:30 minutes). This lecture will discuss large sample proportion hypothesis testing.

  • Lecture: Khan Academy’s Statistics

Instructions: Please view the entire lecture (approximately 12 minutes). This lecture will discuss the difference of sample means distribution

  • Lecture: Khan Academy’s Statistics

Instructions: Please watch the entire lecture (approximately 16 minutes). This lecture will discuss confidence interval of difference of means.

Terms of Use: Please respect the copyright and terms of use displayed on the webpage displayed above.

Subunit 5.2: Hypothesis Testing: Two Means, Paired Data, Two Proportions[edit | edit source]

Comparing Two Independent Population Means with Unknown Population Standard Deviations[edit | edit source]

  • Readings: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 10: Hypothesis Testing: Two Means, Paired Data, Two Proportions”

Instructions: Please read each of the linked sections above in their entirety.

Terms of Use: Please respect the copyright and terms of use displayed on the webpages.

Comparing Two Independent Population Means with Known Population Standard Deviations[edit | edit source]

  • Readings: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 10: Hypothesis Testing: Two Means, Paired Data, Two Proportions”

Instructions: Please read the entire webpage in its entirety.

Terms of Use: Please respect the copyright and terms of use displayed on the webpages.

Comparing Two Independent Population Proportions[edit | edit source]

  • Readings: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 10: Hypothesis Testing: Two Means, Paired Data, Two Proportions"

Instructions: Please read the entire webpage in its entirety.

  • Lecture: Khan Academy’s Statistics

Instructions: Please view these three video lectures in their entirety (approximately 27 minutes total). These lectures will discuss comparing population proportions and hypothesis test comparing population proportions.

Terms of Use: Please respect the copyright and terms of use displayed on the webpages displayed above.

Matched or Paired Samples[edit | edit source]

Video Lecture 10: Hypothesis Testing with Two Means
  • Readings: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 10: Hypothesis Testing: Two Means, Paired Data, Two Proportions

Instructions: Please read the entire webpage in its entirety.

  • Lecture: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Video Lecture 10: Hypothesis Testing with Two Means"

Instructions: Please view the linked lecture.

  • Assignment: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 10: Hypothesis Testing: Two Means, Paired Data, Two Proportions”

Instructions: Click on the hyperlinks titled “Practice 1: Hypothesis Testing for Two Proportions” and “Practice 2: Hypothesis Testing for Two Averages” and solve the problems. Next, click on the hyperlink titled “Homework” and solve problems 1, 5, 7, 9, 11, 15, 17, 21, 23, 27, 29, 33, 35, 43-48. Please click on “[ Show Solution ]” link below the problem to check your solution.

  • Lecture: Khan Academy’s Statistics

Instructions: Please view the entire 10-minute video lecture, which will discuss hypothesis test for difference of means.

Terms of Use: Please respect the copyright and terms of use displayed on the webpage displayed above.

Subunit 5.3: Chi-Square Distribution[edit | edit source]

5.3.1 Notation and Facts

  • Readings: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 11: The Chi-Square Distribution”

Instructions: Please read each of the linked sections above in their entirety.

  • Lecture: Khan Academy’s Statistics

Instructions: Please view all three video lectures in their entirety (approximately 40 minutes total). These lectures will provide an introduction to the Chi-Square distribution as well as the Chi-Square test.

Terms of Use: Please respect the copyright and terms of use displayed on the webpages displayed above.

Goodness-of-Fit Test[edit | edit source]

  • Readings: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 11: The Chi-Square Distribution"

Instructions: Please read the entire webpage in its entirety.

Terms of Use: Please respect the copyright and terms of use displayed on the webpages.

Test of Independence[edit | edit source]

  • Readings: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 11: The Chi-Square Distribution"

Instructions: Please read the entire webpage in its entirety.

Terms of Use: Please respect the copyright and terms of use displayed on the webpages.

Test of a Single Variance (Optional)[edit | edit source]

Video Lecture 11: The Chi-Square Distribution
  • Readings: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 11: The Chi-Square Distribution"

Instructions: Please read the entire webpage in its entirety.

  • Lecture: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Video Lecture 11: The Chi-Square Distribution”

Instructions: Please view the lecture to the right in its entirety.

  • Assignment: Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics: “Chapter 11: The Chi-Square Distribution”

Instructions: Click on the hyperlinks titled “Practice 1: Goodness-of-Fit Test,” “Practice 2: Contingency Tables,” and “Practice 3: Test of a Single Variance” and solve the problems. Next, click on the hyperlink titled “Homework” and solve odd numbered problems between 3-37. The solutions are provided below the problem. Please solve all of the problems before checking the solutions.

Terms of Use: Please respect the copyright and terms of use displayed on the webpages.

About the Resources in This Course[edit | edit source]

This course project draws upon three main types of resources:

The first are readings and video lectures from Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean’s Collaborative Statistics, which is available freely under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC BY 2.0) license from the following location: http://cnx.org/content/col10522/latest/

The second type of resources in this course are lectures from Kahn Academy. These lectures are available under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0) license. Kahn Academy has many lectures available from http://www.khanacademy.org/

Finally, the above resources have been woven together and organized into a format analogous to a traditional college-level course by professional consultants that work as experts within the subject area. This process was facilitated by The Saylor Foundation. Additionally, if you have worked through all of the material contained in this project, you may be interested in taking the final exam provided by Saylor.org or completing other courses available there that are not yet on Wikiversity.