Top Banner
Copyright 2004 Dr. J. Kyle Roberts niversity of North Texas Unit 1: Background to Inferential Statistics Lesson 2: Measures of Central Tendency EDER 6010: Statistics for Educational Research Dr. J. Kyle Roberts University of North Texas Next Slide
14
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

Unit 1: Background to Inferential Statistics

Lesson 2: Measures of Central Tendency

EDER 6010: Statistics for Educational Research

Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

Next Slide

Page 2: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

Three Measures of Central Tendency

Mode

Median

Mean

Next Slide

Page 3: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

ModeThe value in a distribution of scores that occurs the most frequently

X

9

8

8

6

5

7

8

X f

9 1

8 3

7 1

6 1

5 1

Mode = 8

Next Slide

Page 4: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

ModeQuestion 1 Can I have more than one mode?

X

9

8

8

6

5

7

7

X f

9 1

8 2

7 2

6 1

5 1

X

1

2

3

4

5

Question 2 Must I have a mode?

Question 3 What level of scale do I need to compute a mode?

Next Slide

Page 5: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

What Good is a Mode Anyway?

What do I know if I know that the mode of my dataset is 5?

Next Slide

Page 6: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

MedianThe “Middle” Score

The median is the score that divides the distribution of scores into two equal halves

Odd numbers of people Even numbers of people

2

nX Lowest

X

1

2

3

4

5

221 MiddleMiddle XX X

1

2

3

4Mdx=3 Mdx=2.5

Next Slide

Page 7: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

What Good is a Median Anyway?

What do I know if I know that the median of my dataset is 5?

Next Slide

Page 8: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

MeanThe “average” score

n

XX i

Y

TAASX

GRE

Next Slide

Page 9: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

Computing the Mean

X

1

2

3

4

5

5

54321 X

5

15X

3X

Next Slide

Page 10: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

What Good is a Mean Anyway?

What do I know if I know that the mean of my dataset is 5?

Next Slide

Page 11: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

Questions about Central Tendency!! X

1

3

2

2

3

5

2

What would the mode of this dataset be?

a. 1b. 2c. 3d. 4e. 5

a. 1b. 2c. 3d. 4e. 5

Next Slide

Page 12: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

Questions about Central Tendency!! X

1

3

2

2

3

5

2

What would the median of this dataset be?

a. 1b. 2c. 3d. 4e. 5

a. 1b. 2c. 3d. 4e. 5

Next Slide

Page 13: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

Questions about Central Tendency!! X

1

3

2

2

3

5

2

What would the mean of this dataset be?

a. 1.50b. 2c. 2.57d. 3.8e. 18

a. 1.50b. 2c. 2.57d. 3.8e. 18

7

2532231 X

7

18X

Next Slide

Page 14: Unit 1 lesson 2

Copyright 2004Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas

Unit 1: Background to Inferential Statistics

Lesson 2: Measures of Central Tendency

EDER 6010: Statistics for Educational Research

Dr. J. Kyle Roberts

University of North Texas