SOLUTION: to test the hypothesis that students who finish an exam first get better grades, professor hardtrach kept tract of the order inwhich papers were handed in, the first 25 papers show

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Question 441166: to test the hypothesis that students who finish an exam first get better grades, professor hardtrach kept tract of the order inwhich papers were handed in, the first 25 papers showed a means of 77.5 with a standard deviation of 19.6, while the last 24 papers handed in showed a mean score of 69.3 with a standard deviation of 24.9 is this significant defference at a=.0? perform a one-tail test
Answer by stanbon(75887) About Me  (Show Source):
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To test the hypothesis that students who finish an exam first get better grades. Professor kept track of the order in which papers were handed in. The first 25 papers showed a mean score of 77.1 with the standard deviation of 19.6, while the last 24 papers handed in showed a mean score of 69.3 with a standard deviation of 24.9. Is this a significant difference at a= .05?
(a) State the hypothesis for a right -tailed test.
Ho: u(early)-u(later)=0
Ha: u(early)-u(later)> 0
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(b) Obtain a test statistic and p-value assuming equal variances. Interprest these results.
Run a 2-Sample T-Test to get:
test statistic: t = 1.2212
p-value = 0.1141...
Since p-value is greater than 5%, Fail to Reject Ho.
The professor is wrong.
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(c) Is the difference in mean scores large enough to be important
The test says "no".
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(d) Is it reasonable to assume equal variances?
Ho: (s(early))^2 = (s(later))^2
Ha: they are not equal
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F-score critical values :0.44 and 2.27
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Test statistic: F = 19.6^2/24.9^2 = 0.6196...
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Conclusion: Since test stat is not in either rejection interval, Fail to
reject Ho.
Statistically speaking, the variances are not different.
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Cheers,
Stan H.