Student 1, Student 2, and Student 3 Fall Semester 2014
Our Project (JH: DO NOT DO WRITE OUT COMPLETE SENTENCES like this group did!) For our project we selected climate as our FBI topic area of interest and used city-data.com as our source. We then decided to choose population size, percentage of prominent race, unemployment rate, and robbery. From this point, we gathered data and began making graphs to better present what we found. Enjoy!—JH: Write out soundbites of your hypotheses
Phoenix, AZ Anchorage, AK Tucson, AZNew York, NY Los Angeles, CA Billings, MT San Diego, CA Missoula, MT Sacramento, CADetroit, MI Jacksonville, FL Grand Rapids, MI Miami, FL Minneapolis, MN Columbia, SC St. Paul, MN Albuquerque, NM Fargo, ND Santa Fe, NM Bismarck, ND Houston, TX Portland, ME San Antonio, TX Baltimore, MD Dallas, TX Philadelphia, PA Austin, TX Seattle, WA Fort Worth, TX Spokane, WA Warm ClimatesCold Climates
Average Temperature in July, 2010
Top 3 Warmest and Coldest Cities in 2010 N = 30
July Average Temperature in 2010 N = 30
Race/Ethnicity Average by City, 2010
Unemployment Rate in 2010
Number of Reported Robberies in 2010
The Connection Between Hot Weather And Crime (JH: no-no because no results shown) By looking at the number of robberies reported in the warmer cities in relation to that of the cold cities, it is proven that more crime happens in warmer areas. The warmer weather gives more of an opportunity for crime to occur with people being outside or on vacation, leaving their belongings to be unattended. JH: do not write in complete sentences—no visuals Source for all graphs-