Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGordon Mills Modified over 9 years ago
1
1 Outline 1. Why do we need statistics? 2. Descriptive statistics 3. Inferential statistics 4. Measurement scales 5. Frequency distributions 6. Z scores 7. The standard normal distribution 8. Norms
2
2 Why do we need statistics? Every test result is a product of both random influences and systematic influences Statistical analysis helps us separate these two types of influence on behavior
3
3 Why do we need statistics? Basic idea of measurement theory: O = T + e “Observed score = True score + error” T = systematic part of a score e = random error of measurement
4
4 Why do we need statistics? Consider example on next two slides S1, S2, etc = systematic influences on Jamie’s score R1, R2, etc = random influences
5
5 Why do we need statistics? S1 = IQ (120) S2 = 10 hours studying S3 = Motivation is high R1 = Disturbed while studying text pages 180-184 R2 = Friend buys Jamie coffee before exam
6
S3 S2 S1 R1 R2 Observed Score % Observed score reflects a variety of influences: O = T + e
7
7 Descriptive Statistics Measures of central tendency Mean – arithmetic average Median – score with half of observations above and half below Mode – most frequent score
8
8 Descriptive Statistics Measures of central tendency Measures of variability Range Variance & standard deviation Standard error of measurement
9
Inferential Statistics Population Sample Drawing a sample Making an inference
10
10 Measurement scales A. Nominal Labels; not really numbers B. Ordinal Ranks C. Interval Equal intervals; no true zero D. Ratio Equal intervals; true zero
11
11 Frequency distributions A frequency distribution is a graph It shows how often scores fall in various ranges X-axis = scores on some dimension Y-axis = frequency of those scores in a given data set
12
12 Frequency distributions The “Normal Curve” is a frequency distribution Average scores are most common Curve is symmetric
13
13 Z scores The Z score measures distance between a given score and the mean Z = x – X s
14
µ Z = 1.0 34.13% of scores fall in this region Area under the curve gives probability of obtaining a score in that region (see Z table)
15
15 Norms Z score is a measure of relative standing How does one person do relative to the group they belong to? Norms are also comparative scores Express test performance in terms of a defined group or a defined capability
16
16 Norms Age-referenced norms reference group is defined by age compare one person to others Criterion- referenced norms describes skills, tasks, knowledge a test-taker possesses not used to compare test- takers
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.