STAT 200 practice exam
Refer to the following frequency distribution for Questions 1, 2, 3, and 4.
The frequency distribution below shows the distribution for checkout time (in minutes) in MiniMart between 3:00 PM and 4:00 PM on a Friday afternoon.
Checkout Time (in minutes) |
Frequency |
1.0 – 1.9 |
5 |
2.0 – 2.9 |
3 |
3.0 – 3.9 |
7 |
4.0 – 4.9 |
3 |
5.0 – 5.9 |
2 |
1. What percentage of the checkout times was less than 4 minutes? (5 pts)
__________
2. Calculate the mean of this frequency distribution. (10 pts)
__________
3. In what class interval must the median lie? (You don’t have to find the median) (5 pts)
__________
4. Assume that the smallest observation in this dataset is 1.2 minutes. Suppose this observation were
incorrectly recorded as .2 instead of 1.2 minutes. (5 pts)
Will the mean increase, decrease, or remain the same?
___________
Will the median increase, decrease or remain the same?
____________
Refer to the following information for Questions 5 and 6
A 6-faced die is rolled two times. Let A be the event that the outcome of the first roll is even. Let B be the event that the outcome of the second roll is greater than 4.
5. What is the probability that the outcomes of the second roll is greater than 4, given that the
first roll is an even number? (10 pts)
____________
6. Are A and B independent? (5 pts)
____________
Refer to the following data to answer questions 7 and 8.
A random sample of Stat 200 weekly study times in hours is as follows:
4, 14, 15, 17, 20
7. Find the standard deviation. (10 pts)
_____________
8. Are any of these study times considered unusual in the sense of our textbook? (2.5 pts)
_____________
Does this differ with your intuition? (2.5 pts)
_____________
Refer to the following situation for Questions 9, 10, and 11.
The five-number summary below shows the grade distribution of two STAT 200 quizzes.
Minimum |
Q1 |
Median |
Q3 |
Maximum |
|
Quiz 1 |
12 |
40 |
60 |
95 |
100 |
Quiz 2 |
20 |
35 |
50 |
90 |
100 |
For each question, give your answer as one of the following: (a) Quiz 1; (b) Quiz 2; (c) Both quizzes have the same value requested; (d) It is impossible to tell using only the given information. (5 pts each)
9. Which quiz has less interquartile range in grade distribution?
_____________
10. Which quiz has the greater percentage of students with grades 90 and over?
_____________
11. Which quiz has a greater percentage of students with grades less than 60?
____________
Refer to the following information for Questions 12 and 13.
There are 1000 students in the senior class at a certain high school. The high school offers two Advanced Placement math / stat classes to seniors only: AP Calculus and AP Statistics. The roster of the Calculus class shows 95 people; the roster of the Statistics class shows 86 people. There are 43 overachieving seniors on both rosters.
12. What is the probability that a randomly selected senior is in at least one of the two classes?
(10 pts)
____________
13. If the student is in the Calculus class, what is the probability the student is also in the Statistics
class? (10 pts)
_____________
14. A random sample of 225 SAT scores has a mean of 1500. Assume that SAT scores have a population
standard deviation of 300. Construct a 95% confidence interval estimate of the mean SAT scores.
(15 pts)
The proper distribution for calculating the Confidence Interval is:
Chi Square, t distribution, z distribution
The lower and upper limits for the 95% confidence interval are:
___________ ___________
Refer to the following information for Questions 15, 16, and 17.
A box contains 5 chips. The chips are numbered 1 through 5. Otherwise, the chips are identical. From this box, we draw one chip at random, and record its value. We then put the chip back in the box. We repeat this process two more times, making three draws in all from this box.
15. How many elements are in the sample space of this experiment? (5 pts)
_____________
16. What is the probability that the three numbers drawn are all different? (10 pts)
_____________
17. What is the probability that the three numbers drawn are all odd numbers? (10 pts)
_____________
Questions 18 and 19 involve the random variable x with probability distribution given below.
X |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
P(x) |
0.1 |
0.2 |
0.4 |
0.1 |
0.2 |
18. Determine the expected value of x. (10 pts)
_____________
19. Determine the standard deviation of x. (10 pts)
_____________
Consider the following situation for Questions 20 and 21.
Mimi just started her tennis class three weeks ago. On Average, she is able to return 15% of her opponent’s serves. If her opponent serves 10 times, please answer the following questions.
20. Find the probability that she returns at most 2 of the 10 serves from her opponent. (10 pts)
_____________
21. How many seves is she expected to return? (5 pts)
_____________
22. Given a sample size of 64, with sample mean 730 and sample standard deviation 80, we perform
the following hypothesis test. (20 pts)
Ho ?= 750
H1 ? < 750
What is the appropriate distribution for performing this Hypothesis test?
Z distribution, t distribution, Chi Square distribution, Empirical Rule
What is the critical value of the test statistic at ?= 0.05 level?
____________
Calculate the test statistic.
____________
What is the P-value for this Hypothesis Test?
_____________
What is your conclusion (decision) for this hypothesis test at ?= 0.05 level?
Null Hypothesis Alternate Hypothesis
Refer to the following information for Questions 23, 24, and 25.
The heights of pecan trees are normally distributed with a mean of 10 feet and a standard deviation of 2 feet.
23. What is the probability that a randomly selected pecan tree is between 10 and 12 feet tall? (10 pts)
_____________
24. Find the 3rd quartile of the pecan tree distribution. (5 pts)
_____________
25. If a random sample of 100 pecan trees is selected, what is the standard deviation of the sample mean? (5 pts)
_____________
26. Consider the hypothesis test given by
Ho ? = 530
H1 ? ? 530
In a random sample of 81 subjects, the sample mean is found to be 524. Also, the population standard deviation is ?= 27. (20 pts)
Calculate the Test Statistic.
____________
What is the P-value for this test?
____________
Is there sufficient evidence to justify the rejection of Ho at ?= 0.01 level?
Do not reject the Null Hypothesis
Accept the Alternate Hypothesis
There is insufficient evidence to make a decision
27. A certain researcher thinks that the proportion of women who say that the earth is getting warmer
is greater than the proportion of men. (25 pts)
In a random sample of 250 women, 70% said that the earth is getting warmer.
In a random sample of 220 men, 68.18% said that the earth is getting warmer.
At the .05 significance level, is there sufficient evidence to support the claim that the proportion of
women saying the earth is getting warmer is higher than the proportion of men saying the earth is
getting warmer?
What is the Null Hypothesis?
_____________
What is the Alternate Hypothesis?
_____________
What is the numerical value of z critical?
_____________
What is the numerical value of the test statistic?
_____________
What is the P-value for this Hypothesis test?
_____________
What is your decision based upon this Hypothesis test?
_____________
Refer to the following data for Questions 28 and 29.
X |
0 |
– 1 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
Y |
4 |
– 2 |
5 |
6 |
8 |
28. Find an equation of the least squares regression line. (15 pts)
What is the Y intercept of the equation?
_____________
What is the slope of the equation?
_____________
Y = ______ + ______x
Answer the following questions to receive full credit for this problem.
?x = _______, ?y = _______, ?x2 = _______, ?xy = _______
29 Using the equation you calculated in question 28 What is the predicted value of y if x=4? (10 pts)
___________
30. The Daily News reported that the color distribution for plain M&M’s was: 40% brown, 20% yellow, 20% orange, 10% green, and 10% tan. Each piece of candy in a random sample of 100 plain M&M’s was classified according to color, and the results are listed below. Use a 0.05 significance level to test the claim that the published color distribution is correct. (25 pts)
Color |
Brown |
Yellow |
Orange |
Green |
Tan |
Number |
45 |
13 |
17 |
7 |
18 |
What is the Null Hypothesis?
__________________
What is the Alternate Hypothesis?
__________________
What is the degrees of freedom for this Hypothesis test?
__________________
What is the numerical Chi Square critical value?
__________________
What is the numerical value of the Chi Square test statistic?
__________________
Having completed the Hypothesis test what is the appropriate decision?
Null Hypothesis Alternate Hypothesis
31. Please note: Each time you re-due the Final Exam the answer to question 31 may change, but the subject matter and format will not change.
Example question:
Identify the type of sampling used (random, systematic, convenience, stratified, or cluster sampling) in the situation described below. (1 pt)
A woman experienced a tax audit. The tax department claimed that the woman was audited because she was randomly selected from all taxpayers.
What type of sampling did the tax department use?
32. Problem 32 is the Honor Pledge. This question must be answered (truthfully) in the positive in order to receive credit for taking the Final Exam.