Numeracion Alfabetica

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Classroom Activity 2

Math 113

The Dating Game

Introduction:
Disclaimer: Although this is called the Dating Game, it is merely intended to help the student
gain understanding of the concept of Standard Deviation. It is not intended to help students find
dates.
The day after Thanksgiving, 1996, I was driving my sister,
brother-in-law, and sister-in-law over to meet my brother in
Springfield at the Mission where he and his wife helped out.
During this drive, I ask my sister, How do you know which
woman is the right one for you?. Now, my sister was born
a Jones, and like the rest of the family, she can make
anything sound believable. Without missing a beat, she
said, You take the letters in her name, convert them to
numbers, find the standard deviation, and whoevers
standard deviation is closest to yours is the woman for you.
I was so proud of my sister, that was a really good answer.
Then, she followed it up with Actually, if you can find a
woman who knows what a standard deviation is, thats the
woman for you.

A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J

=
=
=
=
=
=
=
=
=
=

Conversion Table
1 K = 11 U
2 L = 12 V
3 M = 13 W
4 N = 14 X
5 O = 15 Y
6 P = 16 Z
7 Q = 17
8 R = 18
9 S = 19
10 T = 20

=
=
=
=
=
=

21
22
23
24
25
26

The first part was easy, take each letter in your name and convert it to a number. Use the system
where an A=1, B=2, ... Z=26.
J

Mean

Standard Deviation

10

13

19

9.6 . J

6.986

Now, lets interpret the results. The mean of my name is 9.6 which rounds to 10 which
corresponds to the letter J. So, the letters in my name are centered around the letter J. There is
no conversion of the standard deviation to a letter because the standard deviation is a measure of
dispersion how spread out the letters are. It doesnt make sense (in this case) to say that my
letters are G (6.986 . G) letters apart. But what the standard deviation tells us is that the
average (I use that word loosely - close to technically speaking, it is the quadratic mean of the
deviations rather than the arithmetic mean of the deviations, but thats not important right now)
deviation is 7 letters.
An important thing to remember is that the order of the values does not affect the standard
deviation. In other words, the standard deviation of AEJMS would be the same as JAMES (but
Im really glad my parents didnt name me AEJMS).
Lets take another name. This time, well use the name SANDI (while not her given name, its
important to use the name the person goes by or whichever name gives the standard deviation
closest to yours)

19

14

Looking at the letters in SANDI, you find that they are very similar to the letters in JAMES. In
fact, since order of the letters isnt important, lets put both names into alphabetical order to
compare the differences.
A

Mean

Standard Deviation

10

13

19

9.6 . J

6.986

14

19

9.4 . I

7.301

You can see that the letters are very similar indeed. This is why our means are close to each
other. But, her letters are a little bit further away from the mean than mine (her D is one letter
less than my E and her N is one letter more than my M). For that reason, her standard deviation
is a little, not much, larger than mine.
Lets take another name, BRENDA
B

18

14

Looking at the letters in her name, we see that the A and E are in common with the JAMES, and
that the R and N are close to the S and M. However, she has a couple of other letters, D and B
thrown in there. Since those letters are close to the beginning of the alphabet, her mean will be
less than JAMES.
Determining the standard deviation is a bit harder, but thats really what the point of this whole
exercise is. Since several of her letters are bunched closely together, they will have a small
deviation, but the R and N will account for more of the total deviation. Another thing to consider
with BRENDA is that there are six letters instead of the five with JAMES. This means that even
though there may be more variation in her name, it may actually be less when you find the
average.
A

Mean

Standard Deviation

10

13

19

9.6 . J

6.986

14

18

7.333 . G

6.976

As we see, BRENDA does have a lower mean, but her standard deviation is very similar.

Classroom Activity 2
10 pts

Math 113
Name : ___________________
Intro to Applied Stats

1.

Write down the letters in your preferred first name and convert them to numbers.

2.

Rearrange the letters into alphabetical order. This is not necessary to find the
standard deviation, but it helps visualize the name

3.

Find the median letter for your name. The median letter would be the letter in the
middle (if you have an odd number of letters) or the midpoint between the two
middle letters (if you have an even number of letters).

4.

Enter the numbers from your name into Statdisk on the computer and find the
descriptive statistics. Record the mean and standard deviation below (round your
answers to three decimal places). Write your name and standard deviation on the
board for the class to use in part 6..
a.

Mean =

b.

Standard Deviation =

5.

Compare your mean to your median, is your name symmetric, skewed to the left,
or skewed to the right?

6.

Write the names and standard deviations of the three people in the class with the
standard deviations closest to yours.

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