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Statistics Grade 9-12

Statistics: Sampling

Designing and evaluating samples for statistical studies

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Designing and evaluating samples for statistical studies

Statistics - Grade 9-12

Instructions: Read each problem carefully. Show your work or explain your reasoning in the space provided.
  1. 1

    A school wants to estimate the average number of hours students spend on homework each week. The principal surveys 50 students from the advanced placement study hall. Identify the population, the sample, and one possible source of bias.

  2. 2
    Five groups of people with selected individuals highlighted in each group, illustrating stratified sampling.

    A city divides its residents into five age groups and randomly selects 100 people from each age group to survey about public transportation. What sampling method is being used, and why is it useful?

  3. 3

    A researcher assigns every student in a school a number and uses a random number generator to choose 120 students for a survey. What sampling method is this?

  4. 4

    A mall employee asks the first 80 shoppers who walk past a booth to answer a question about a new store. What sampling method is being used, and what is one concern about it?

  5. 5

    A teacher wants to know whether students prefer online or paper textbooks. She writes every student's name on a slip of paper, mixes the slips, and draws 30 names. Explain why this method could produce an unbiased sample.

  6. 6

    A survey about student cafeteria food is posted online, and any student who wants to respond may do so. What type of sample is this, and why might the results be biased?

  7. 7
    Comparison of a town population and an imbalanced survey sample with too few children.

    A town has 60 percent adults and 40 percent children. A survey about park improvements includes 90 adults and 10 children. Explain why this sample may not represent the town well.

  8. 8
    Light bulbs being sampled from multiple factory machines for inspection.

    A factory produces light bulbs on 12 machines. An inspector randomly selects 5 bulbs from each machine every hour to test. What sampling method is used, and why might it be better than sampling from only one machine?

  9. 9
    City blocks selected as clusters, with every household in selected blocks surveyed.

    A researcher wants to survey households in a large city. She randomly selects 20 city blocks and surveys every household on those blocks. What sampling method is this?

  10. 10

    A school newspaper asks students, 'Do you agree that the new schedule is unfair and should be changed immediately?' Identify the problem with the wording and rewrite the question in a less biased way.

  11. 11

    A polling company wants to estimate support for a candidate in a state. It randomly selects 1,000 registered voters from a current voter list and contacts them by phone. Name one strength and one limitation of this sampling plan.

  12. 12

    A sample of 25 students is selected from a high school with 2,000 students to estimate the percentage of students who ride the bus. Is the sample size alone enough to decide whether the sample is representative? Explain.

  13. 13
    Three department groups of different sizes with proportional subsets highlighted for a stratified sample.

    A company has employees in three departments: sales, technology, and customer support. It wants a stratified sample of 60 employees in proportion to department size. Sales has 100 employees, technology has 150 employees, and customer support has 50 employees. How many employees should be selected from each department?

  14. 14

    A sports website surveys only its subscribers to estimate how many people in the country watch professional basketball. Explain why this sampling frame may cause bias.

  15. 15

    A researcher surveys 500 randomly selected adults and finds that 58 percent support a new recycling program. The researcher states, 'Exactly 58 percent of all adults support the program.' Explain why this conclusion is too strong.

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