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IB Math Studies – Topic 6 Statistics

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IB Math Studies – Topic 6. Statistics. IB Course Guide Description. IB Course Guide Description. IB Course Guide Description. Continuous and Discrete Data. Continuous: A numerical data which has values within a continuous range that has been measured. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

IB Math Studies – Topic 6

Statistics

Page 2: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

IB Course Guide Description

Page 3: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

IB Course Guide Description

Page 4: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

IB Course Guide Description

Page 5: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

Continuous: A numerical data which has values within a continuous range that has been measured.

Discrete: A numerical data which has whole numbers and has been counted.

Continuous and Discrete Data

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Presenting and Interpreting Data

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Stem-and-leaf Plots

Stem-and-leaf, or at times called stemplot, is a easy way of writing down the data in groups. Used for small data sets

For number with two digits, the first digit forms part of the stem and the second digit forms a leaf

Page 9: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

• A line graph, utilized much like a histogram, that gives a visual appreciation of the shape of the frequency distribution. • The midpoint of each bar is used to represent the whole interval. • Lines are then draw between these midpoints.

Frequency Polygon

Page 10: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

A histogram is a vertical column graph used to represent continuous grouped data.

There are no gaps between the columns in a histograms as the data is continuous.

Histograms

Page 11: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

A box-and-whisker plot is a visual display of some of the descriptive statistics of a data set.

Box and Whisker Plot

• Outliers are extraordinary data that are usually separated form the main body of the data. • The upper boundary =

upper quartile + 1.5 X IQR• The lower boundary =

lower quartile – 1.5 X IQR

Page 12: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

Summarizing the Data• Mean: is the arithmetic

average obtained by adding all the scores and dividing by the total number of scores.

• Mode: is the score that occurs most frequently.

• Median: Is the middle score after they have been placed in order.

Page 13: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

Grouped Discrete Data

Page 14: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

Grouped Continuous Data

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Range: is the difference between the maximum data value and the minimum data value. Range = maximum data value – minimum data

value Interquartile Range: is the range of the middle

half (50%) of the data. The data set has been divided into quarters by

the lower quartile (Q1), the median (Q2) and the upper quartile (Q3).

IQR = Q3 – Q1

Measure of Dispersion

Page 16: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

Standard Deviation: measures the deviation between scores and the mean.

Ungrouped Data

Grouped Discrete Data

Standard Deviation

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Correlation• A correlation refers to the relationship or association between two

variables

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A scatter diagram indicates the relationship between two variables.

If there is a relationship, we can draw in the “line of best fit”

Line of Best Fit

• Drawing a Line of Best Fit• Calculate mean of x values , and

mean of y values• Mark the mean point on

the scatter plot• Draw a line through the mean point

that is through the middle of the data• equal number of points above

and below line

xy

,x y

Page 19: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

The line of best fit on a scatter diagram is called a “regression line” and it can be calculated from the data pairs.

Regression Line

)(2 xxss

yyx

xy

• The regression line is used for prediction purposes.• The regression line is less reliable when extended far beyond

the region of the data.

Page 20: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

Correlation Coefficient• -1 indicates

perfect negative correlation.

• 0 indicates no correlation

• +1 indicates perfect positive correlation.

• 0.25 ≤ r < 0.5 = weak

• 0.5 ≤ r < 0.75 = moderate correlation

• 0.75 ≤ r <1 = strong correlation

Page 21: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

The Chi-Squared Test

How many people are in the sample? How many males? How many females?

This is called a 2 x 2 contingency table.

Page 22: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

1) Write the null hypothesis (H0) and the alternate hypothesis (H1).

2) Create contingency tables for observed and expected values.

3) Calculate the chi-square statistic and degrees of freedom.

4) Find the chi-squared critical value (booklet).• Depends on the level of significance (p) and the degrees

of freedom (v).

5) Determine whether or not to accept the null hypothesis.

Page 23: IB Math Studies – Topic 6

On the calculator:Put your contingency table in matrix A

STAT TESTS

C: χ2 Test

Observed: [A] Expected: [B] (this is where you want to go)

Calculate

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X2

exp2