Our first stat test was today! Thanks for sweating it out in the lecture hall and for working with so much perseverance. In general, what you experienced on the exam today is the level of difficulty that you should expect on all Statistics exams.
Because this was our first AP exam experience, I considered a 3/4 on the open response questions to be 100%. This will not continue for much longer, but for now, I don't want you to become discouraged if your responses aren't perfect. 4/4 got you extra credit points.
Question 1 on the multiple choice wasn't counted and I gave it as free points. It didn't make much sense otherwise.
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Univariate Review/Multiple Choice
We reviewed our entire first chapter today on univariate data/graphical displays. Some important notes to remember for tomorrow's exam.
-10 multiple choice, 3 open response, you choose the two open response that you want to complete. If you do all three then I take the highest two.
-You may bring one 8.5 x 11 sheet of notes with you - front side only.
Something that I forgot to mention in class is that WE WILL BE TESTING IN THE LECTURE HALL. Please report there first period.
I realize that there are bag checks in the morning. I need you to realize that I have a class 2nd period. Don't take all day to get to the lecture hall - the longer you take to get there, the less time you will have on your test. Make good decisions.
Answers to today's multiple choice questions are:
1) C
2) C
3) C
4) B
TI.1) D
TI.2) B
TI.3) B
TI.4) B
TI.5) B
TI.6) D
TI.7) don't worry about this one yet - quartiles are coming up later, probably next week
TI.8) don't worry about this one yet - we'll compare means next week
TI.9) E
TI.10) B
TI.11) D these are comparative boxplots - our next unit.
Go through the open response questions and, for everything except TI.12) part c, make sure that you'd know how to answer the question. You don't necessarily have to do all the questions, just know what you'd write or calculate if you were answering them. Plus five bonus points on your test if you write one thing that you like about AP Statistics on the back of the last page of tomorrow's test.
Happy studying!
-10 multiple choice, 3 open response, you choose the two open response that you want to complete. If you do all three then I take the highest two.
-You may bring one 8.5 x 11 sheet of notes with you - front side only.
Something that I forgot to mention in class is that WE WILL BE TESTING IN THE LECTURE HALL. Please report there first period.
I realize that there are bag checks in the morning. I need you to realize that I have a class 2nd period. Don't take all day to get to the lecture hall - the longer you take to get there, the less time you will have on your test. Make good decisions.
Answers to today's multiple choice questions are:
1) C
2) C
3) C
4) B
TI.1) D
TI.2) B
TI.3) B
TI.4) B
TI.5) B
TI.6) D
TI.7) don't worry about this one yet - quartiles are coming up later, probably next week
TI.8) don't worry about this one yet - we'll compare means next week
TI.9) E
TI.10) B
TI.11) D these are comparative boxplots - our next unit.
Go through the open response questions and, for everything except TI.12) part c, make sure that you'd know how to answer the question. You don't necessarily have to do all the questions, just know what you'd write or calculate if you were answering them. Plus five bonus points on your test if you write one thing that you like about AP Statistics on the back of the last page of tomorrow's test.
Happy studying!
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Univariate Open Response
AP free response requires acute understanding of statistics. Today we discussed a time series open response, a bar graph response, and how the responses are graded. Remember, you get E for essentially correct, P for partially correct, and I if any part of your response is incorrect. Your final score is graded out of 4.
Remember to be VERY SPECIFIC in your responses! Never use words like "it is" when you could be saying something like "the data is..."
Remember to be VERY SPECIFIC in your responses! Never use words like "it is" when you could be saying something like "the data is..."
Monday, August 26, 2013
Hint for Problem 2, Part E, Part C
Part E of problem 2 asks if a histogram would be appropriate given the data. Consider what your data is ACTUALLY composed of: 200 zeroes, 85 ones, 45 twos, and so on. Remember that you are measuring the number of impairments, not the frequency. Frequency is simply the number of times that number shows up in the data.
Given that your data is composed of a bunch of zeroes, ones, and other small numbers, would it MAKE SENSE to use a stem and leaf plot here?
Problem Two part c asks to make a relative frequency histogram. Normally we can do this on the TI, but that trick only works if we have the raw data. We only have the frequencies. Use those to make your histogram. Don't forget to label and title!
Given that your data is composed of a bunch of zeroes, ones, and other small numbers, would it MAKE SENSE to use a stem and leaf plot here?
Problem Two part c asks to make a relative frequency histogram. Normally we can do this on the TI, but that trick only works if we have the raw data. We only have the frequencies. Use those to make your histogram. Don't forget to label and title!
2-Way Contingency Tables
Two-way contingency tables are used to compare two QUALITATIVE variables, such as gender versus political party, or uniform shirt color versus uniform pants color. We make the table and then find the totals for all variables by counting the number of observations in each.
This is an example of a 2-way contingency table. We can find the marginal distributions by looking to the row/column totals and dividing by the grand total. For example, if we wanted to find the marginal distribution of yes event observed, we would do 8/28. A conditional distribution is conditioned on one of the variables within the table. For example, if we said "find the conditional distribution of no event observed conditioned on yes event forecasted, we would do 16/18. Usually, we write these answers as a percentage rather than a fraction.
For five extra bonus points on your next problem set, find and interpret the conditional distribution of yes event forecasted conditioned on no event observed. I will take your submissions up until this Friday, August 31st.
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Hints for Problem Set 1, Question 1
Problem 1, Part B, last part: Think about the type(s) of variables that Mrs. Long is measuring, and think about what type of information that a histogram contains (which we went over in class on Friday). Does it make sense to use a histogram given the types of random variables?
Problem 1, Part C: refer to the chart that we made in class on Friday. There is definitely more than one possible correct answer for each scenario, make sure you justify it properly. Complete sentences, please!
Problem 1, Part E: think about a variable that you would observe in real life where, if you made a graph of it, would be roughly distributed symmetrically or skewed.
Problem 1, Part C: refer to the chart that we made in class on Friday. There is definitely more than one possible correct answer for each scenario, make sure you justify it properly. Complete sentences, please!
Problem 1, Part E: think about a variable that you would observe in real life where, if you made a graph of it, would be roughly distributed symmetrically or skewed.
Scatterplots
Scatterplots compare two bivariate variables. Our independent variable goes on the x axis and the dependent variable goes on the y-axis (think back to algebra 1, here). While we can't CUSS for a scatterplot in the exact same way, we do describe three aspects of the data:
1) Direction - do the observations appear to be going in a positive or negative direction?
2) Strength - are the observations close together? Far apart? Not correlated at all?
3) Linearity - do the data appear to be in the shape of a straight line?
1) Direction - do the observations appear to be going in a positive or negative direction?
2) Strength - are the observations close together? Far apart? Not correlated at all?
3) Linearity - do the data appear to be in the shape of a straight line?
Histograms
Histograms are used to graph univariate, quantitative data. We like to use these particularly when we have continuous data (data with decimals), but they can still be used for discrete data (whole numbers) as well.
NOTE: Histograms are NOT the same thing as a bar graph!! Bar graphs chart qualitative data while histograms chart quantitative data.
To make a histogram on the TI-84, enter your data into L1. Go to Stat Plot, turn the graph on, pick the one that looks like the histogram. Then press zoom - 9) Statistics.
NOTE: Histograms are NOT the same thing as a bar graph!! Bar graphs chart qualitative data while histograms chart quantitative data.
To make a histogram on the TI-84, enter your data into L1. Go to Stat Plot, turn the graph on, pick the one that looks like the histogram. Then press zoom - 9) Statistics.
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Comparing Distributions
In the case of more than one graph, it makes sense to compare distributions of the same random variable. For example, we could compare the number of times girls can hop on one foot in a minute to the number of times boys could hop on one foot in a minute in terms of center, shape, spread, and outliers (CUSS). We did this today in class with two stem-and-leaf plots. Make sure to use comparative language such as "greater than," "smaller than," etc. and keep it in the context of the problem.
Shout out to Deja Collins for figuring out why it's not appropriate to CUSS when we're looking at a bar graph. Remember, you can only CUSS about QUANTitative data! Nice work!
Shout out to Deja Collins for figuring out why it's not appropriate to CUSS when we're looking at a bar graph. Remember, you can only CUSS about QUANTitative data! Nice work!
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Describing a Distribution
Today we learned how to describe distributions via dotplots. We need to CUSS when we do this - meaning, we need to mention Center, Unusual Observations, Shape, and Spread. BE SPECIFIC when you do this, putting everything in the context of the problem!
The first problem set was given out today. It is due Wednesday, August 28th. Make sure that all of your graphs contain titles and labels.
Shout Out to Toni Clinton for calling me and asking a question about the problem set - way to go! VERY impressed that you started it already and I'm proud of your time management skills.
The first problem set was given out today. It is due Wednesday, August 28th. Make sure that all of your graphs contain titles and labels.
Shout Out to Toni Clinton for calling me and asking a question about the problem set - way to go! VERY impressed that you started it already and I'm proud of your time management skills.
Monday, August 19, 2013
Monday August 19
Today was weird because we were cut short by a pep rally. The class went over the syllabus, expectations, and supplies for the class. We discussed the high expectations for this class - it is one of the most challenging in the school in terms of workload and dedication. However, the test is certainly passable with hard work and commitment to understanding the material.
All students in the class will take the AP Exam in May. This class is an ELECTIVE - it is a choice, not a requirement. If you don't want to be in the class or don't think that the workload is something that you can handle - that's fine - I won't be offended. Talk to your counselor about scheduling options that make sense for you.
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