subject
Mathematics, 15.10.2020 08:01 Geo777

. Suppose (as is roughly true) that 88% of college men and 82% of college women were employed last summer. A sample survey interviews SRSs of 400 college men and 400 college women. The two samples are of course independent. (a) What is the approximate distribution of the proportion pF of women who worked last summer? What is the approximate distribution of the proportion pM of men who worked? (b) The survey wants to compare men and women. What is the approximate distribution of the difference in the proportions who worked, pM − p F ? Explain the reasoning behind your answer. (c) What is the probability that in the sample a higher proportion of women than men worked last summer?

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on Mathematics

question
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 17:00
Simone claims the initial value and y-intercept are the same thing on a graph. is she correct? if you know that a line has a slope of and a y-intercept of 7, what is the equation for that line in slope-intercept form?
Answers: 1
question
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 21:30
Joanie wrote a letter that was 1 1/4 pages long. katie wrote a letter that was 3/4 page shorter then joagies letter. how long was katies letter
Answers: 1
question
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 22:10
Use the spider tool located on page 1 of this activity to draw a 12-pointed star for the new logo. (hint: if the spider rotates 360 degrees -- or 720 degrees or 1080 degrees -- she will be facing in the same direction in which she started. when the spider is done drawing, you want her to be facing in the same direction in which she started. she'll be making 12 rotations, all the same size, so each rotation must be some multiple of 360/12 = 30 degrees.) urgently. been stuck on this problem for around 45 minutes now.! it should be easy if you're smart enough
Answers: 3
question
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 22:20
As voters exit the polls, you ask a representative random sample of voters if they voted for a proposition. if the true percentage of voters who vote for the proposition is 63%, what is the probability that, in your sample, exactly 5 do not voted for the proposition before 2 voted for the proposition? the probability is
Answers: 2
You know the right answer?
. Suppose (as is roughly true) that 88% of college men and 82% of college women were employed last s...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 06.12.2021 07:40
question
Mathematics, 06.12.2021 07:40
question
English, 06.12.2021 07:40
question
Computers and Technology, 06.12.2021 07:40
question
History, 06.12.2021 07:40
question
Chemistry, 06.12.2021 07:40
question
Mathematics, 06.12.2021 07:40
Questions on the website: 13722363