Assignments

  1. Assignment 1: Quiz on Wednesday May 25 at the beginning of class.
  2. Assignment 2: Midterm on Monday, June 6th.
  3. Assignment 3: Midterm on Monday, June 6th.
  4. Assignment 4: For the final exam
  5. Assignment 5: For the final exam
  6. Assignment 6: For the final exam
  7. Assignment 7: For the final exam
  8. Assignment 8: For the final exam
  9. Assignment 9: For the final exam. That's the last one!

  1. This is the assignment for the Quiz, which will be given at the beginning of class on Wednesday May 25th. The assigned problems are not to be handed in. They are preparation for the quiz. The quiz will be multiple choice, open book and closed notes.

    Read Chapter One. Everything you need to know from this chapter will also be given in lecture. You are responsible for the following concepts. Items in boldface will be covered in lecture but they are not in the text -- not in this chapter, anyway.

    Do problems 1.2, 1.5, 1.6, 1.7, 1.11, 1.13, 1.15a-c, 1.19.

    Read Chapter 2, Section 2.1. You are responsible for the following concepts.

    Do problems 2.5a-c; 2.7a-d; 2.11a,b,d. In class, I will also discuss frequency distributions and joint frequency distributions (See Computer Display 1); you are responsible for joint frequency distributions now. The text waits until Ch. 13.

    Read Chapter 2, Section 2.2. You are responsible for the following concepts.

    Do problems 2.25, 2.30, 2.32.

    Read Chapter 2, Section 2.3. Lecture will include this material plus a couple of additional summation rules, which boil down to a+b = b+a and a(x1+x2) = ax1 + ax2, but with funny notation. Do problems 2.43 and 2.45.

    Read Chapter 2, Section 2.4. You are responsible for the following:

    Do problems 2.51, 2.53, 2.55, 2.57

    Read Chapter 2, Section 2.5. You are responsible for the following:

    Do problems 2.74, 2.75, 2.79

    Read Chapter 2, Section 2.6. You are responsible for the following concepts. Don't worry; it's open book.

    Do problems 2.88, 2.89

    Read Chapter 2, Section 2.7. You are responsible for the following concepts.

    Do problems 2.103-2.105, 2.107, 2.109, 2.114, 2.117

    Skip section 2.8. Then read Chapter 2, Section 2.9. You are responsible for the following concepts.

    Do problems 2.139,2.146

    Section 2.10, which could be called how to lie with statistics, is entertaining and valuable, but you are not responsible for it. Please read it anyway.

    Do all this in preparation for the Quiz on Wednesday, May 25th. The problems are not to be handed in. They are just preparation for the quiz.

     

  2. Assignment Two

    This is the first of several assignments for the Midterm test, which will be on Monday June 6th. Homework questions are not to be handed in; do them in preparation for the quiz. Also, please treat all in-lecture examples as homework problems with solutions.

    Read Chapter 3, Section 3.1. You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 3.9, 3.11, 3.13, 3.14, 3.15, 3.17, 3.27, 3.29, 3.30 (Probability of a correct match by chance is 1/3), 3.31, 3.32 (1/4, 1/2, 0),3.122, 3.123, 3.124, 3.125

    Read Chapter 3, Sections 3.2, 3.3 and 3.4. You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 3.40 (3/10, 6/10, 8/10), 3.41, 3.43, 3.45, 3.47, 3.51, 3.55

    Read Chapter 3, Sections 3.5 and 3.6. You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 3.63,3.65, 3.69, 3.71, 3.73, 3.81, 3.85

    Read Chapter 3, Section 3.9. You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 3.127, 3.129, 3.131, 3.133. 3.135, 3.137

    Also, please do Supplemental Exercises 3.146, 3.147, 3.151, 3.161, 3.171, 3.173, 3.175

     

  3. Assignment Three

    This assignment covers Chapter 4 and associated lecture material. Homework questions are not to be handed in; do them in preparation for the Midterm test, which will be on Monday June 6th. Also, please treat all in-lecture examples as homework problems with solutions.

    Read the introduction to Chapter 4, and Section 4.1. You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 4.3, 4.5. Notice that in all these examples, the random variables are quantitative. But discrete random variables can be qualitative too. For example, you could randomly sample a person from the population of Toronto, and let x designate residence type: 1 = apartment, 2 = single-family dwelling, 3 = homeless and 4 = other. Can you give an example of a random variable that is both continuous and qualitative?

    Read Section 4.2. You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 4.11, 4.12 (Yes, No, No, No), 4.13, 4.15, 4.17, 4.19a and c, 4.23, 4.24 (0.51, 0.0225), 4.25.

    Read Section 4.3. You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 4.29, 4.31, 4.33, 4.39, 4.40 (-70¢), 4.43. Note that some material has been deleted here.

    Read Section 4.4. You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 4.45, 4.46 (5, 0.7), 4.49, 4.51, 4.53, 4.57, 4.59, 4.61c, 4.63b, 4.66 (15), 4.68 (0.001, approximately one: calculate the z-score).

    Skip Sections 4.5 and 4.6. You are done with Chapter 4.

     

  4. Assignment Four

    This assignment covers Chapter 5 and associated lecture material. Homework questions are not to be handed in; do them in preparation for the final exam. Also, please treat all in-lecture examples as homework problems with solutions.

    Read Sections 5.1 and 5.2 . I promise no questions about the disgusting "super weapon" on either the midterm or the final. You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 5.5, 5.9, 5.13, 5.15

    Read Section 5.3 . You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 5.18, 5.19, 5.22 (a: 0.0721, b: 0.0594, c: 0.2434, d: 0.3457, e: 0.5, f: 0.9233, g: 0.9901, h: 0.9901), 5.23, 5.25, 5.27, 5.29, 5.33, 5.35, 5.37, 5.43

    Skip sections 5.4, 5.5 and 5.6. You are done with Chapter 5.

     

  5. Assignment Five

    This assignment covers Chapter 6 and associated lecture material. Homework questions are not to be handed in; do them in preparation for the final exam. Also, please treat all in-lecture examples as homework problems with solutions.

    Read the Introduction and Section 6.1. You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 6.1, 6.3.

    Read Section 6.2. You are responsible for the following:

    For the data of Question 6.3,
    1. What is µ?
    2. Is the sample mean x-bar biased or unbiased?
    3. What is the standard error of the sample mean? Show your work.

    Read Section 6.3. You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 6.21-6.24, 6.27, 6.29a and c, 6.31, 6.35, 6.37, 6.41

    You are done with Chapter 6.

     

  6. Assignment Six

    This assignment covers Chapter 7 and associated lecture material. Homework questions are not to be handed in; do them in preparation for the final exam. Also, please treat all in-lecture examples as homework problems with solutions.

    Read the Introduction and Sections 7.1-7.2. Note that the vocabulary "target parameter" will not occur on the final exam. You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 7.7, 7.9, 7.11, 7.17, 7.23

    Read Section 7.3. Note that this technology applies for small samples only when you have reason to believe that the data come from a normal distribution. You are responsible for the following:

    Do Exercises 7.29, 7.31, 7.39

    Read Section 7.4. You are responsible for the following:

    You are not responsible for the adjusted 100(1-alpha)% Confidence interval, but it's potentially useful. Keep it in the back of your mind if you ever encounter this situation in practice.

    Do Exercises 7.45(abc), 7.49, 7.57

    Skip Section 4.5. You are done with Chapter 7.

     

  7. Assignment Seven

    This assignment covers Chapter 8 and associated lecture material. Homework questions are not to be handed in; do them in preparation for the final exam. Also, please treat all in-lecture examples as homework problems with solutions.

    Read the Introduction and Section 8.1. You are responsible for the following concepts:

    The whole process is summarized nicely on P. 374 in "Elements of a test of hypothesis."

    Please do Exercises 8.9, 8.11, 8.13, 8.15

    Read Section 8.2. You are responsible for the following concepts:

    Please do Exercises 8.21, 8.23, 8.25, 8.27, 8.29, 8.31, 8.33, 8.35. In 8.33, all those "explain" parts are based on the hope that you will guess the following fact: The null hypothesis H0: µ=µ0 will be rejected at significance level alpha using a two-tailed test if and only if µ0 is outside the 100(1-alpha)% confidence interval for µ. It's not really that obvious, though it does make sense.

    Read Section 8.3. You are responsible for the following concepts:

    Please do Exercises 8.37, 8.39, 8.41, 8.43, 8.45, 8.47

    Read Section 8.4. This section presents the one-sample t-test. Our text describes it as a "samll sample" test, but actually it applies to small samples from a normal distribution, and also to large samples from  any distribution. For large samples from a normal distribution, it is preferable to the large-sample z-test, but you will not lose any marks in this course by using the z-test for large samples from a normal distribution.

    You are responsible for the following:

    Please do Exercises 8.55, 8.57, 8.59, 8.61, 8.63. In 8.63, assume you know that scores on the Dental Anxiety Scale have a distribution that is approximately normal. Without such assurance, you should not proceed.

    Read Section 8.5.

    You are responsible for the following:

    Please do Exercises 8.73, 8.77, 8.79, 8.81

    Skip Sections 8.6 and 8.7. You are done with Chapter 8.

     

  8. Assignment Eight

    This assignment covers Chapter 9 and associated lecture material. We are skipping confidence intervals and everything concerning variances. Homework questions are not to be handed in; do them in preparation for the final exam. Also, please treat all in-lecture examples as homework problems with solutions.

    Read the Introduction and Sections 9.1 and 9.2. Don't worry about confidence intervals. You are responsible for the following concepts:

    Please do Exercises 9.3, 9.5, 9.7, 9.9a,b, 9.11, 9.15, 9.25, 9.27 (Assume a normal distribution or you can't do it). See 9.23. Why should you NOT do a t-test, as the book did?

    Skim Section 9.3 or don't read it at all. You still know how to do the problems.

    Please do Exercises 9.35d (assume normality), 9.39 (assume normality; why do they forget this so often?), 9.46 (again assume normality -- it's untestable with such a small sample size!)

    Read Sections 9.4. Don't worry about confidence intervals. You are responsible for the following concepts:

    Please do Exercises 9.53, 9.63, 9.67

    Skip sections 9.5 and 9.6. You are done with Chapter 9.

     

  9. Assignment Nine

    This assignment covers a little bit of Chapter 10, along with associated lecture material. Homework questions are not to be handed in; do them in preparation for the final exam. Also, please treat the in-lecture example (see page 2 of Display 3) as a set of homework problems with solutions.

    Read the Introduction and Section 10.1. You are responsible for the following concepts:

    Please do Exercises 10.7, 10.9

    Read Section 10.2. The textbook keeps using the term "Completely randomizd design." By this, they mean either independent random sampling from two or more sub-populations (that is, pre-existing groups), or random assignment to 2 or more treatment conditions. The vocabulary "Completely randomizd design" is non-standard and you will not be tested on it, but you do have to know what they mean in order to read this part of the text. You are responsible for the following concepts:

    You won't have to compute Sums of Squares by hand; final exam questions will be based on computer output .

    Please do Exercises 10.19, 10.24 (a. F=4.01, b. 7, c. Yes because F > 1.98 d. p < 0.01), 10.27

    Skip the rest for now, though I will discuss the Tukey tests from Section 10.3 in class. We are done!