National University of Lesotho Department of Statistics and Demography Tutorial 1 St1381: Elementary Statistics
National University of Lesotho Department of Statistics and Demography Tutorial 1 St1381: Elementary Statistics
National University of Lesotho Department of Statistics and Demography Tutorial 1 St1381: Elementary Statistics
1. A survey of 100 people is conducted and all are asked questions relating to the
following characteristics:
a) Marital Status
b) Salary
c) Occupation
d) Number of hours of television they watch per week.
What type of data and measurement are they?
2. Classify each as nominal level, ordinal level, interval level, or ratio level of
measurement.
a) Number of candy bars sold on a fund drive.
b) Classification of automobiles as subcompact, compact, standard, and luxury.
c) Temperatures of hair dryers.
d) Weights of suitcases on a commercial airliner.
6. Here are the numbers of complete games thrown in the American league and the
national league for the years 1997 through 1999. (A complete game is a game for
which the team’s starting pitcher is the only pitcher, he pitches the entire game).
Determine whether the following statements are descriptive or inferential. Explain the
reasoning behind your choice.
a) During each of these three seasons, there were at least 120 complete in the
national league.
b) There will always be at least 120 complete games in a season in the national
league.
c) In the season of 2014, there will be more complete games in the National League
than the American league.
d) During these three seasons, the American league had fewer complete games than
the national league.
e) The National league has more complete games because the hitters in their league
are not as good as the hitters in the American league.
f) The American league has fewer complete games because its relief pitchers are
superior to the National league’s relief pitchers.
7. Here are the numbers of homicide arrests of juveniles aged 18 and under in the
United States for the years 1993 through 1999.
10. A random sample of 200 academic staff members was taken at a university. Each
was asked the following questions:
a) What is your rank (Lecturer, Senior Lecturer, Professor)?
b) What is your annual salary?
c) In which faculty (Business, Engineering, Arts) are you employed?
d) How many years have you been employed?
Identify the type of data as quantitative or qualitative. If quantitative, classify it as
either discrete or continuous. Indicate the measurement scale in each category.
14. The numbers of students in each year at school are shown in the table. In a stratified
random sample, based on a year groups, what proportion of students should be
chosen from each year?
Year 7 8 9 10 11 12 Total
Number of students 122 131 135 120 94 81 683
15. A school of 859 students is made up as follows.
Year 7 8 9 10 11 12
Number of students 125 142 175 160 134 123
16. Imagine that a local clothing manufacturer has 2,700 employees. The personnel
manager decides to ask the employees for suggestions on how to improve their
workplace. It would take too long to survey everyone, so the manager chooses to
systematically sample 300 of the employees.
a) What would be the sampling interval?
b) If the number 8 was your first randomly drawn number, what would be the first
20 numbers of your sample?
17. A machine produces 300 items per day. At what intervals should we select a
systematic sample of :
a) 25 items, 50 items, 10, items and 15 items.
b) Explain how to obtain a systematic sample of 50 items.