Population and Sampling Sampling demonstration Directions Your going

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Population and Sampling

Population and Sampling

Sampling demonstration Directions: Your going to taste 3 different Jelly Beans and pick which

Sampling demonstration Directions: Your going to taste 3 different Jelly Beans and pick which one you like the best. If you don’t want to test the Jelly Beans then you can pick the color you like the best.

Today I am: statistics Going to understand that _______ can be used to gain

Today I am: statistics Going to understand that _______ can be used to gain population information about a _________ by examining a sample ______ of the population; generalizations about a population from a sample are valid only if the sample is representative of that population. Understand that random sampling tends to produce representative samples and support valid inferences. So that I can: random sample Use a ___________ to draw inferences about a population by explaining how statistics can be used to gain information about a population by examining a sample of the ____________. population I’ll know if I got it if: sample identify I can judge a _________ and _________ if it represents that population.

Population • Definition: the group of interest

Population • Definition: the group of interest

Sample • Definition: data collected for analysis

Sample • Definition: data collected for analysis

Sampling • Definition: collecting data from a subset of data

Sampling • Definition: collecting data from a subset of data

Data • Definition: information collected for observation or analysis

Data • Definition: information collected for observation or analysis

Representative Sampling • Definition: in data collection, a sample whose values are represented of

Representative Sampling • Definition: in data collection, a sample whose values are represented of the whole population

Random Sampling • Definition: data collected from a subset of a population that is

Random Sampling • Definition: data collected from a subset of a population that is chosen randomly

Biased Sampling • Definition: A sample is biased if individuals or groups from the

Biased Sampling • Definition: A sample is biased if individuals or groups from the population are not represented in the sample.

Inference • Definition: an informed guess based on evidence

Inference • Definition: an informed guess based on evidence

Problem 1 A factory manager wants to know how many of the 20, 000

Problem 1 A factory manager wants to know how many of the 20, 000 LED light bulbs made each day are defective. His employees suggest three possible ways for taking a sample of 200 bulbs: Method 1: Test the first two hundred bulbs made each day. Method 2: Test every one hundredth bulb made each day. Method 3: Assign the numbers 1 to 20, 000 to the bulbs. Randomly select 200 numbers between 1 and 20, 000, and test the bulbs with those numbers. Which method will allow the manager to make the best guess of the total number of defective bulbs made each day?

Problem 2 Reggie wants to find out the favorite website of the 700 students

Problem 2 Reggie wants to find out the favorite website of the 700 students in grades 7 though 9. His plan for taking a sample it to ask the first 20 male 8 th graders on his school bus to name their favorite website: a. Describe a better sampling method that Reggie can use. b. Do you think if he takes two random samples of the same size, he will get the same results?

Problem 3 In Ancient West Africa, salt and gold were very valuable. Would it

Problem 3 In Ancient West Africa, salt and gold were very valuable. Would it be a true statement to say: Everyone in West Africa was wealthy from the abundance of salt and gold ? a. Do you think this is an accurate statement? b. What might be a better statement?

Problem 4 Nuevo citizens patrol wants to know if the town’s residents are in

Problem 4 Nuevo citizens patrol wants to know if the town’s residents are in favor of putting speed bumps on residential streets in Nuevo. On a Tuesday around noon, they knocked on the doors of fifty residents in one neighborhood to ask, “Would you like speed bumps on your street to slow drivers down? ” a. Do you think the opinions they get are likely to represent those of all residents in Nuevo? b. Create 2 other methods that might be better to represent the community of Nuevo.

Re-visit Objective • Tell you group how you can now: judge a sample and

Re-visit Objective • Tell you group how you can now: judge a sample and identify if it represents that population.

Homework Page 270 #’s 1 -3

Homework Page 270 #’s 1 -3