ap stats chapter 1 review

38
AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Upload: tammy

Post on 24-Feb-2016

62 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

AP Stats Chapter 1 Review. Q1: The midpoint of the data. Mode. Mean. Median. You chose the mean and that is the average of the data. The midpoint of the data is the median . . Go to Q2. You chose the mode and that is the observation with the highest frequency. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

AP StatsChapter 1 Review

Page 2: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Q1: The midpoint of the data

Mean MedianMode

Page 3: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q2

You chose the mean and that is the average of the data.

The midpoint of the data is the median.

Page 4: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q2

You chose the mode and that is the observation with the highest frequency.

The midpoint of the data is the median.

Page 5: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q2

Correct! Way to go!!

The midpoint of the data is the median.

Page 9: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q3

You’re right! A graph is skewed in the direction of the tail. So the

graph in Q2 would be skewed right.

Page 10: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Q3: Which one of these is NOT a measure center?

Mean MedianStandard Deviation

Page 11: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q4

You are right! Standard deviation is a measure of how spread out the data is. Mean and

median are both measures of center.

Page 12: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q4

Mean and median are both measures of center. Standard deviation is a measure of

how spread out the data is, not center.

Page 13: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Q4: Males, Teenagers, Phone numbers are all examples of what type of data?

Critical QualitativeQuantitative

Page 14: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q5

There is no such thing as critical data. Males, Teenagers, Phone numbers are all examples

of qualitative or categorical data.

Page 15: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q5

Quantitative data is numerical data that would make sense to take the average or mean of it.

Males, Teenagers, Phone numbers are all examples of qualitative or categorical data.

Page 16: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q5

You’re right! Males, Teenagers and Phone numbers are all examples of qualitative or categorical data.

Quantitative data is numerical data that would make sense to take the average or mean of it.

Page 17: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Q5: The best graphical representation for quantitative data is:

Standard normal curve Histograms and Stemplots

Bar Graphs and Pie Charts

Page 18: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q6

The best graphical representation for quantitative data is histograms, stemplots

and dotplots. Bar graphs and pie charts are the best

graphical representation for qualitative data.

Page 19: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q6

The best graphical representation for quantitative data is histograms, stemplots and dotplots.

Bar graphs and pie charts are the best graphical representation for qualitative data.

A standard normal curve is a representation for the distribution of symmetrical data. It does not give specific information that is

needed for a graphical representation.

Page 20: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q6

You are right! But also remember that bar graphs and pie

charts are the best graphical representation for qualitative data.

Page 21: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Q6: Another word for Ogives is:

Cumulative Frequency Relative FrequencyPercentiles

Page 22: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q7

Another word for ogives is cumulative frequency. It means to adds up the frequency

of the observations that fall at or below a specific observation.

A percentile is the percentage of observations that fall at or below a specific observation.

Page 23: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q7

Another word for ogives is cumulative frequency. It means to adds up the frequency

of the observations that fall at or below a specific observation.

Relative frequency is how often an outcome is observed.

Page 24: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q7

You are right!!A percentile is the percentage of

observations that fall at or below a specific observation.

Relative frequency is how often an outcome is observed.

Page 25: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Q7: The Interquartile Range (IQR) is:

Q3- Q1 Q3- Q2Q1- Q3

Page 26: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q8

No, sorry!The Interquartile Range (IQR) is Q3-Q1

Page 27: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q8

You are right!!The Interquartile Range (IQR) is Q3-Q1

Page 28: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Q8: To calculate if a observation is a lower outlier, you would do the following:

Q1 +1.5(IQR) 1.5Q1-IQRQ1-1.5(IQR)

Page 29: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q9

If an observation is less than or smaller than Q1-1.5(IQR)

that observation is an outlier.

Page 30: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q9

Good Job! You are right!If an observation is less than or smaller than

Q1-1.5(IQR) that observation is an outlier.

Page 31: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Q9: The 5 number summary is best to describe this type of data:

Normal Non-normalSymmetric

Page 32: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q10

Mean and median work best for symmetrical data. The 5 number summary is best to describe

non-normal or skewed data.

Page 33: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Go to Q10

Good Job! You are right!The 5 number summary is best to describe

non-normal or skewed data.Mean and median work best for symmetrical

data.

Page 34: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Q10: This tells us what values the variable takes and how often it takes these values.

Distribution VarianceCorrelation

Page 35: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

End!

No, sorry. Correlation tells us the strength of the relationship between 2 variables.

The distribution tells us what values the variable takes and how often it takes these values.

(Variance is the standard deviation squared.)

Page 36: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

End!

No, sorry. Variance is the standard deviation squared.

The distribution tells us what values the variable takes and how often it takes these values.

(Correlation tells us the strength of the relationship between 2 variables.)

Page 37: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

End!

You are right, distribution does tell us what values the variable takes and how often it takes these

values.Correlation tells us the strength of the relationship

between 2 variables.Variance is the standard deviation squared.

Page 38: AP Stats Chapter 1 Review

Thanks for reviewing the Chapter 1 vocabulary!