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Stat3.1Lessonplan(3days) • • 1) SWDAT define and calculate percentiles, z-score, standardized value, and center and spread of density curves. – CC.9-12.S.ID-4 • 2) Anticipatory set: Students will be asked what it means for their test score to be in the 96th percentile. – Procedure: Students will formulate a definition for percentile and then calculate percentiles for various data points and data sets. Then, students will calculate z-scores and learn about standardizing. Lastly, I will introduce density curves, their properties, and uses in statistics along with various exercises. – Closure: Review strategy for exploring data – Resources: Slides, Textbook, – Adaptations: Work with individual students or small groups as needed. Demonstrate activities as needed. – Homework: Various book exercises 3) Assessment: Informal during group and individual work. Select students to share and justify their solutions and explain strategies for various problems. Section3.1Donow: • Takesomeshellnotes • Whatdoesitmeanwhenyouaretoldthatyou areinthe96th percentileonanexam? • The57th percentile? Percentiles • ThePth percentileofadistributionisthe valuewithppercentoftheobservationsless thanorequaltoit? Relatethisdefinitionbacktoyouranswerforthedo now.Wasyourmeaningcorrect? Let’slookatthe65-inchheight.Whatisthe percentileoftheheight? Since10ofthe25observationsareatorbelow thisheight,65-inchesisthe40th percentile. Standardizing • Wecanalsodescribelocationsbycalculating thenumberofstandarddeviationsan observationsfallsaboveorbelowthemean. • Convertingobservationsfromoriginalvalues tostandarddeviationsiscalledstandardizing • Thenewstandard-valuesarecalledz-scores. Findthestandardizedheightorz-scorefor65 inchesand74inches. Z=(65-67)/4.29=-.47sothisheightisahalfofa standarddeviationawayfromthemean. Z=(74-67)/4.29=1.63 A)Findthepercentilecorrespondingto6.35million. Whatdoesthisvaluemean? B)Findthez-scorecorrespondingto6.35million. Whatdoesthisvaluemean? DensityCurves • Exploringdataonasinglequantitativevariable • 1.Alwaysplotyourdata:makeagraph,usuallya histogramorstemplot • 2.Lookfortheoverallpattern(shape,spread, center)andforoutliers • 3.Chooseeitherthe5-numbersummaryormean andstandarddeviation • 4.Sometimestheoverallpatternofalarge numberofobservationsissoregularthatwecan describeitbyasmoothcurve. Histogramsandsmoothcurves -Curvetoshowtheproportionof observationsinanyregionby areasunderthecurve. -Thetotalareaunderthecurveis alwaysmadetobe1. (a) The proportion of scores less than 6.0 from the histogram is 0.303. (b) The proportion of scores less than 6.0 from the density curve is 0.293. Densitycurves:CenterandSpread • Median- Thepointonthecurvewherethe areasoneachsideareequal. • Mean- Thepointatwhichthecurvewould balance • Q1andQ3arerepresentedbytheareasunder thecurvethatareone-quarterofthewayand three-quartersofthearea. The mean of a density curve is the point at which it would balance. The median and mean for two density curves: a symmetric Normal curve and a curve that is skewed to the right. Classwork:pg.111# 3.9-3.15 0.5 3.9 2 Median = 1; 0.75 = 2 Q3 = 1.5. Answers will vary. One possibility: The distribution is skewed to the right so that the median < mean. median is approximately 3.5 and the mean is approximately 4.2. The 3.10 Answers will vary. One possibility: The distribution is well approximated by a uniform distribution between 0 and 9 having mean=median=4.5. 3.11 (a) The overall shape of the distribution is symmetric and mound-shaped. Hence, the mean and median are equal and are at point A. (b) The overall shape of the distribution is skewed to the left. The mean is at A and the median is at B. 3.12 and the median is at B. 3.12 3.13 (a) The distribution is skewed to the right, thus the mean is to the right of the 3.13 median. Point “A” clearly does not mark the 50th percentile, so the median (a) must The distribution is skewed to at the“C”. right, thus the mean is to the right of the be at “B” and the mean median. Point “A” clearly does not mark the 50th percentile, so the median (b) The distribution is the symmetric so the mean and the median both mark the must be at “B” and mean at “C”. th distribution located at “A”. 50 (b) The percentile distributionofisthe symmetric so and the are mean and the median both mark the (c) The distributionof is to the theatmean theskewed distribution andleft, are thus located “A”. is to the left of the 50th percentile th (c) median. The distribution is skewed to thenot left, thusthe the50mean is to the the percentile so left the of median Point “C” clearly does mark median. “C” the clearly does not mark the 50th percentile so the median must be atPoint “B” and mean at “A”. must be at “B” and the mean at “A”. 3.14 means that that 90% 90% of of similar similar men men have have cholesterol cholesterollevels levelsthat thatare are 3.14 It It actually actually means less or equal equal to to Martin’s Martin’s level. level. Martin’s Martin’s cholesterol cholesterolisiscomparatively comparatively less than than or high, not low. 3.15 (a) (b) (c) The mean of the 50 observations is calculated to be 5.598 percen median is 5.45 percent. The standard deviation is 1.391 percent distribution of unemployment rates is fairly symmetric, with a center o 5.5 percent and a spread of 5.6 percent. In the ordered data set, Illinois’s unemployment rate is 40th. Th percentile for Illinois is 40/50=.8. 80% of the unemployment rates a than or equal to Illinois’s unemployment rate. Illinois has a pret (b) (c) (d) The mean of the 50 observations is calculated to be 5.598 percent. The median is 5.45 percent. The standard deviation is 1.391 percent. The distribution of unemployment rates is fairly symmetric, with a center of about 5.5 percent and a spread of 5.6 percent. In the ordered data set, Illinois’s unemployment rate is 40th. Thus, the percentile for Illinois is 40/50=.8. 80% of the unemployment rates are less than or equal to Illinois’s unemployment rate. Illinois has a pretty high unemployment rate compared to the remaining 49 states. Since .4*50=20, the state whose unemployment rate is 20th among the ordered observations represents the 40th percentile. Texas represents the 40th percentile with an unemployment rate of 5.1%. The z-score for this 5.1 5.598 state is z 1.391 0.36. 3.16 (a) The unemployment rate for Illinois was 2.4% (6.9-4.5) higher in September, 2008 than in December, 2000. (b) The percentile for Illinois (its unemployment rate compared to the rest of the country) did not change much from December of 2000 to September of 2008, it actually dropped slightly. It was at the 86th percentile in December of 2000 (43/50=0.86) versus the 80th percentile in September of 2008. (c) The z-score for Illinois in December of 2000 was z 4.5 3.47 1.03. The 1 unemployment rate for Illinois was slightly higher in December of 2000 than