Speaking of confidence intervals, I also noticed at the review session that you guys are great at interpreting the INTERVAL:
I am 95% confident that the true percentage of Laker fans lies between 85% and 92%.
But not so great at interpreting the confidence LEVEL:
This procedure, when repeated over and over, would produce intervals that would contain the true percentage 95% of the time.
Hope this helps also.
(This tip was NOT brought to you by Coke. Coke gives you the runs.)
Friday, April 28, 2006
Last Minute Tip #1
I noticed at the review that some people were surprised at how much was needed for a confidence interval. When asked for an interval, you should:
Name it
Check the conditions for it
Show the formula
Write it and interpret it
Hope this handy tip helps!
(This tip was brought to you by Pepsi. Drink Pepsi and find everlasting happiness and joy!)
Name it
Check the conditions for it
Show the formula
Write it and interpret it
Hope this handy tip helps!
(This tip was brought to you by Pepsi. Drink Pepsi and find everlasting happiness and joy!)
Answers to Friday's Quiz
D-5:
A) For essentially correct you needed three things:
J-1:
A) Boxplots must have labels and you should have figured out that their are two low outliers and one high outlier for graph A.
Bi) To make the proportion sound best, chose A. With A, over 75% of the cars improved, whereas with B only 50% improved. Note: must compare to B for full credit.
Bii) To pick the highest mean, pick B. B has a lot of higher values than A. A has low outliers which will pull it down. The top 25% of B is from 25 to 40, which is above A's max.
Email me if you have any questions this weekend! (mrmathman@gmail.com)
A) For essentially correct you needed three things:
- Randomly assign the treatment to
- two treatment groups (new drug and old drug)
- and compare the chltr. at the end
- Blocking LINKED to cholesterol level
- Randomly assign treatment
J-1:
A) Boxplots must have labels and you should have figured out that their are two low outliers and one high outlier for graph A.
Bi) To make the proportion sound best, chose A. With A, over 75% of the cars improved, whereas with B only 50% improved. Note: must compare to B for full credit.
Bii) To pick the highest mean, pick B. B has a lot of higher values than A. A has low outliers which will pull it down. The top 25% of B is from 25 to 40, which is above A's max.
Email me if you have any questions this weekend! (mrmathman@gmail.com)
Wednesday, April 26, 2006
The last of the review
Tuesday/Thursday we did:
- Ch. 10 #1 & 2
- K-1
- M—1, 3, 5
I also handed out a list of flash card facts to memorize and will pass out on Thursday the answers to 97 and 02 MC.
Monday, April 24, 2006
Extra Study Sessions
The Last Week Before the Test!!
Tuesday: 2:30-4:00
Wednesday: 2:30-4:00
Friday: 2:30-7:00 (bring $$$$ for pizza!)
Tuesday: 2:30-4:00
Wednesday: 2:30-4:00
Friday: 2:30-7:00 (bring $$$$ for pizza!)
HW/CW for Monday, April 24th and beyond!
In class we did:
Type I & II errors
- Do P. 418 #7 & 9 (use page 410 to refresh memory)
- H-2
- G-4: 1-prop z-interval
- H-5: Chi-sq
- I-3: 2-prop
- K-4: 2 mean interval
HW: Page 511 #9, 13, 23 (check conditions for all three problems)
MC 2002--This is crucial!
Try to get all this homework done on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday night.
In Class--Friday, April 21
We went over the AP test breakdown and did problem A-5. This was our review of matched pairs t-test.
Friday, April 21, 2006
AP Test Breakdown
The AP test is:
20%-30% Exploring Data (first 5 chapters) and Regression (7-9, a little bit of 10)
10%-15% Designing Experiments (12 & 13)
20%-30% Probablity
30%-40% Confidence Intervals and Hypothesis Tests
Make sure you know those pink sheets!
20%-30% Exploring Data (first 5 chapters) and Regression (7-9, a little bit of 10)
10%-15% Designing Experiments (12 & 13)
20%-30% Probablity
30%-40% Confidence Intervals and Hypothesis Tests
Make sure you know those pink sheets!
Homework for the weekend--April 21st
You must show me evidence that you studied at least one hour over the weekend. That is what I will stamp on Monday.
Suggestions:
Suggestions:
- Study the probability worksheet and your probability final
- Do the 7 pink sheets we named on Thursday
- Make a list of the conditions for every test
- Make some flashcards
Answers to Thursday's work
Here are the answers:
- A-4: 2-prop z-test
- A-5: matched pairs mean t-test or 2 mean t-test
- C-2: X^2 two way table
- D-4: 2 mean t-test
- E-5: matched pairs mean t-test
- F-5b: 2 mean t-test
- H-2a: 1-prop z-test
Thursday, April 20, 2006
Homework for Thursday, April 20th
AP test takers:
In class we took notes on how to tell the different pink sheets apart from each other. Here's a few highlights:
In class we took notes on how to tell the different pink sheets apart from each other. Here's a few highlights:
- LinReg t-test:
- Hardly shows up on the test
- Conditions are given to you
- Look for the computer output
- Chi-Square
- Look for categorical data
- one row means GOF
- a table means 2-way table (matrix)
- prop z-tests
- look for __ out of __
- count 1 or 2 n's
- mean t-tests
- look for mean(s), sd(s) and n(s)
- look for a list of numbers
- 1 n or 2 n's or matched n's?
- A-4
- A-5
- C-2
- D-4
- E-5
- F-5b
- H-2a
List of all AP review
For your convenience, here is a list of all the AP problems we have done:
Week 1
Monday:
Monday:
Week 1
Monday:
- F #4, G #1, MC-Z #1-10 + the non-AP book problems
- D #1, C #3, B #5, MC-Z #11-15
- I #1
- D#5, E #4, F #2, G #3
- H #4 & K #2
- MC-Z #16, 17, A #1, J #1, 2, 3, 4, 5
- B #6 & MC-A #1-14
Monday:
- MC-Y #15, E-2, G-2, F-3, K-3
- B-1 and MC-B
- H-3 & I-5
- Probability worksheet (see two posts down!)
non-AP Homework
Here's the non-AP homework, as of April 20th:
Monday/Tuesday:
Monday:
Mr D
- Week 1:
Monday/Tuesday:
- Ch. 7 #5 & 11
- Ch. 8 #9 & 35
- Ch. 9 #11
- Ch. 10 #1
- Ch. 7 #1, 17
- Ch. 8 #5, 7
- Ch. 9 #1
- Ch. 10 #2
- Ch. 12 #11, 15, 19
- Ch. 13 #23, 25
Monday:
- Quiz
- Ch. 3 #5 & 15
- Ch. 4 #5, 15, 19, 29
- Ch. 5 #13, 23, 25, 29, 31
- Start the probability worksheet that the AP students did. Those problems are listed on the post below.
Mr D
Wednesday's Worksheet
Here is what we did on Wednesday, April 19th:
So here's the plan. I have listed one of every type of probability problem from the text. They are all odd. Show your work. Check your answers. Each number is a different concept—keep each one separate! Here they are:
- Ch. 6 #25a
- Ch. 6 #25bc
- Ch 6 #25e
- Ch. 14 #13a-2
- Ch. 14 #13b-1
- Ch. 14 #13b-4
- Ch. 15 #5b
- Ch. 15 #9d
- Ch. 15 #15a
- Ch. 15 #23
- Ch. 16 #15a
- Ch. 16 #15b (hint: look on P. 311—this is just a boring calculator problem. Another hint: can you find this formula on your formula sheet?)
- Ch. 16 #3
- Ch. 16 #33ab
- Ch. 17 #13d (Hint: This is binomial. Use Binomialpdf in handy stats. Also, there is a formula for this one, can you find it? Can you write it? See the example on P. 321-322)
- Ch. 17 #15ab (Hint: Your formula sheet has these two formulas!)
- Ch. 17 #13a
- Ch. 17 #15c (this problem is optional)
- Ch. 18 #9 (Hint: If this feels like a 1-prop z-test, you're right!)
- Ch. 18 #21cd (Hint: central limit theorem)
WOW! That's a long list. But a lot of the problems are short.
Now do this: go back and put a word or phrase on every problem. If you are going to recognize a problem on the AP test, you have to name it! A problem without a name feels lonely and neglected! Give it an identity! I'll get you started:
- drawing a normal curve
- normalcdf
- inverse normal
- disjoint—or—add
- independent—and—multiply
- at least one = 1 – P(none)
- you do the rest!
Wednesday, April 19, 2006
Homework--Wednesday, April 19th
Today's homework was long, but crucial. I gave you a list of 20 problems of each probability type on the AP test. Good luck!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)