The document contains practice exercises involving statistical concepts such as measures of central tendency, measures of dispersion, percentiles, standard scores, and z-scores. It presents statements and asks the reader to identify whether they are true or false, identify missing terms, select the best answer, and complete statements. The exercises cover key topics in descriptive statistics including calculating and interpreting averages, variability, distributions, outliers, percentiles, standardization of scores, and comparing groups.
The document contains practice exercises involving statistical concepts such as measures of central tendency, measures of dispersion, percentiles, standard scores, and z-scores. It presents statements and asks the reader to identify whether they are true or false, identify missing terms, select the best answer, and complete statements. The exercises cover key topics in descriptive statistics including calculating and interpreting averages, variability, distributions, outliers, percentiles, standardization of scores, and comparing groups.
The document contains practice exercises involving statistical concepts such as measures of central tendency, measures of dispersion, percentiles, standard scores, and z-scores. It presents statements and asks the reader to identify whether they are true or false, identify missing terms, select the best answer, and complete statements. The exercises cover key topics in descriptive statistics including calculating and interpreting averages, variability, distributions, outliers, percentiles, standardization of scores, and comparing groups.
The document contains practice exercises involving statistical concepts such as measures of central tendency, measures of dispersion, percentiles, standard scores, and z-scores. It presents statements and asks the reader to identify whether they are true or false, identify missing terms, select the best answer, and complete statements. The exercises cover key topics in descriptive statistics including calculating and interpreting averages, variability, distributions, outliers, percentiles, standardization of scores, and comparing groups.
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Practice Exercise 1
Determine whether each statement is true
or false. If the statement is false, explain why.
1. When the mean is computed for
individual data, all values in the data set are used. 2. The mean cannot be found for grouped data when there is an open class. 3. A single, extremely large value can affect the median more than the mean. 4. One-half of all the data values will fall above the mode. 5. In a data set, the mode will always be unique. 6. The range and midrange are both measures of variation. 7. One disadvantages of the median is that it is not unique. 8. The mode and midrange are both measures of variation. 9. If a person’s score on an exam corresponds to the 75th percentile, then that person obtained 75 correct answers out of 100 questions. 10. Quartiles divides a distribution into four equal parts. Practice Exercise 2
Identify what is asked, give only the term
or the phrase that will make the statement correct.
1. Values which divide the distribution
into ten equal parts. 2. Values that divide the distribution into one hundred equal parts. 3. Measures of location or position which include not only central location but also any position based on the number of equal divisions in a given distribution. 4. Used to locate the position of a score in a distribution. 5. A descriptive measure which are used to locate the position of values or scores in the distribution. 6. The simplest form of measuring the variation of a distribution. 7. The average of the summation of the absolute deviation of each observation from the mean. 8. The ratio of the standard deviation to the mean. 9. This refers to the difference between one of a set of values and some fixed value, usually the mean of the set. 10. This refers to the spread of the values about the mean. Practice Exercise 3 Select the best answer. 1. What is the value of the mode when all values in the data set are different? a. 0 b. 1 c. There is no mode d. It cannot be determined unless the data values are given. 2. When data are categorized as, for example, places of residence (rural, suburban, urban), the most appropriate measure of central tendency is the a. Mean b. Median c. Mode d. midrange 3. P50 corresponds to a. Q2 b. D5 c. IQR d. midrange 4. Which is not part of the five-number summary? a. Q1 and Q3 b. The mean c. The median d. The smallest and the largest values 5. A statistic that tells the number of standard deviations a data value is above or below the mean is called a. A quartile b. A percentile c. A coefficient of variation d. A z-score 6. When a distribution is bell-shaped, approximately what percentage of data values will fall within 1 standard deviation of the mean? a. 50% b. 68% c. 95% d. 99.7% 7. A student takes 4 exams in a Statistics class. Her grades are 89, 79, 95 and 100. If asked of her average. Which measure of central tendency is the student likely to report? a. Mean b. Median c. Mode d. Range 8. Thirty people were asked of their favorite color and their responses were recorded. Which measure of central tendency is most appropriate for the recorded data? a. Mean b. Median c. Mode d. Range. 9. If we add the same constant c to each item in a set of data, what will happen to the mean of the new set of data? a. The mean remains unchanged b. The mean of the original set is multiplied c times c. The mean of the original set plus the constant c d. The mean of the original set is doubled 10. Which measure of central tendency is best use as a measure of an average if there are extreme values. a. mean b. median c. mode d. range 11. The value that represents a set of data will be the basis in determining whether the group is performing better or poorer than the other groups. a. Measures of central tendency b. Standard Deviation c. Measures of Location d. Quartile deviation 12. The results will help you determine if the group is homogenous or not. a. Measures of central tendency b. Standard Deviation c. Measures of Location d. Quartile deviation 13. The results will also help you determine the number of students that fall below and above the average performance. a. Standard Deviation b. Quartile deviation c. Percentile Rank d. Mean Absolute Deviation 14. It will also tell how many of the students fall below or above the region of acceptance performance. a. Standard Deviation b. Quartile deviation c. Percentile Rank d. Mean Absolute Deviation 15. Indicates the pupil’s relative position by showing how far his raw score is above or below average. a. Standard Scores b. Z-scores c. MAD d. Percentile Rank 16. Express the pupil’s performance in terms of standard unit from the mean. a. Standard Scores b. Z-scores c. MAD d. Percentile Rank 17. Represented by the normal probability curve or what is commonly called the normal curve. a. Standard Scores b. Z-scores c. MAD d. Percentile Rank 18. Used to have common unit to compare raw scores from different tests. a. Standard Scores b. Z-scores c. MAD d. Percentile Rank 19. Tells the percentage of examinees that lies below one’s score. a. Standard Scores b. Z-scores c. MAD d. Percentile Rank 20. Tells the numbers of SD’s equivalent to a given raw score. a. Standard Scores b. Z-scores c. MAD d. Percentile Rank Practice Exercise 4
Complete these statements with the best
answer. 1. A measure obtained from sample data a(n) __________. 2. Generally, Greek letters are used to represent parameters, and Roman letters are used to represent __________. 3. The positive square root of the variance is called the __________. 4. The symbol for population standard deviation is __________(in word). 5. When the sum of the lowest data value and the highest data value is divided by 2, the measure is called __________. 6. If the mode is to the left of the median and the mean is to the right of the median, then the distribution is ________skewed. 7. An extremely high or extremely low data value is called a(n) __________. 8. The quickest way to determine the dispersion of scores because it is the easiest measure to compute is ____ 9. __________ is the most important measure of dispersion. 10. __________ differentiates sets of scores with equal averages. 11. The most useful measure of dispersion is __________. 12. Often name as the mean square since we are dividing the sum of squares by the number of cases is __________. 13. __________ is frequently called the semi-interquartile range. It is half the distance between two quartile points. 14. __________ is only used when one is in a hurry to get the measure of variability since this is the least reliable of the measure of variability. 15. It is used when the median is applied as average, that is when the data depart noticeably from normal.