1. Exercise 7-1
Q # 10
Number of faculty. the numbers of faculty at 32 randomly selected state-controlled colleges and
universities with enrollment under 12,000 students are shown below. use these data to estimate the
mean number of faculty at all state-controlled colleges and universities with enrollment under
12,000 with 92% confidence. assume .
211384396211224337395121356
621367408515280289180431176
318836203374224121412134539
471638425159324
Q # 14
Number of jobs. a sociologist found that in a sample of 50 retired men, the average number of jobs
they had during their lifetimes was 7.2. the population standard deviation is 2.1.
a. find the best point to estimate of the population men.
b.find the 95 % confidence interval of the mean number of jobs.
c.find the 99% confidence interval of the mean number of jobs.
d. which is smaller? explain why.
Q # 18
Day care tuition. a random sample of 50 four-year-olds attending day care centers provided a
yearly tuition average of $3987 and the population standard deviation of $630. find the 90%
confidence interval of the true mean. if a day care center were starting up and wanted to keep
tuition low. what would be a reasonable amount to charge?
Exercise 7-2
Q # 8
State Gasoline Taxes. a random sample of state gasoline taxes ( in cents ) is shown here for 12
states. use the data to estimate the true population mean gasoline tax with 90% confidence. does
your interval contain the national average of 44.7 cents?
38.440.96732.551.543.4
2. 3843.450.735.439.341.4
Q # 10
Dance Company Students. the number of students who belong to dance company at each of several
randomly selected small universities is shown below. estimate the true population mean size of a
university dance company with 99% confidence.
2125322228302930
4726352635262828
322740
Exercise 7-3
Q # 6
Belief in haunted places. a random sample of 205 college students were asked if they believed that
places could be haunted, and 65 responded yes. estimate the true proportion of college students who
believed in the possibility of haunted places with 99% confidence. according to time magazine,37%
of americans believe that places can be haunted.
Q # 14
Fighting U.S hunger. in a poll of 1000 likely voters, 560 say that the united states spends too little on
fighting hunger at home. find a 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of voters who feel
this way.
Exercise 8-2
Q # 4
Moviegoers. the average moviegoer sees 8.5 movies a year. a moviegoer is defined as a person who
sees at least one movie in a theater in a 12 month period. a random sample of 40 moviegoers from a
large university revealed that the average number of movies seen per person was 9.6. The
population standard deviation is 3.2 movies. at the 0.05 level of significance, can it be concluded
that this represents a difference from the national average?
Q # 8
Salaries of government employees. the mean salary of federal government employees on the general
3. schedule is $59,593. the average salary of 30 state employees who do similar work is $58,800 with
. at the 0.01 level of significance, can it be concluded that state employees earn on
average less than federal employees?
Q # 12
Student expenditures. the average expenditure per student ( based on average daily attendance) for
a certain school year was $10,337 with a population standard deviation of $1560. a survey for the
next school year of 150 randomly selected students resulted in a sample mean of $10,798. do these
results indicates that the average expenditure has changed? choose your own level of significance.
Exercise 8-3
Q # 6
Park acreage. a state executive claims that the average number of acres in western pennsylvania
state parks is less that 2000 acres. a random sample of five parks is selected, and the number of
acres is shown. at , is there enough evidence to support the claim?
95911874936249541
Q # 14
Chocolate chip cookie calories. the average 1-ounce chocolate chip cookie contains 110 calories. a
random sample of 15 different brands of 1-ounce chocolate chip cookies resulted in the following
calorie amounts. at the , is there sufficient evidence that the average calorie content
is greater than 110 calories?
100125150160185125155145160
100150140135120110
Exercise 8-4
Q # 8
Female Physicians. the percentage of physicians who are women is 27.9%. in a survey of physicians
employed by a larger university health system,45 of 120 randomly selected physicians were women.
is there sufficient evidence at the 0.05 level of significance to conclude that the proportion of women
physicians at the university health system exceeds 27.9%?
4. Q # 18
Doctoral student's salaries. nationally, at least 60% of Ph.D. Students have paid assistantship. a
college dean feels that this is not true in his state, so he randomly selected 50 Ph.D. Students and
finds that 26 have assistantships. at , is the dean correct?
Exercise 9-1
Q # 6
Teachers salaries. california and new york lead the list of average teacher's salaries. the california
yearly average is $64,421 while teachers in new york make an average annual salary of $62,332.
random samples of 45 teachers from each state yielded the following
CaliforniaNew York
Sample mean64,51062,900
Population standard deviation8,2007,800
at is a difference in means of the salaries?
Q # 10
Home Prices. a real estate agent compares the selling prices of homes in two municipalities in south
western pennsylvania to see if there is a difference. the results of the study are shown. is there
enough evidence to reject the claim that the average cost of a home in both locations is the same?
use .
ScottLigonier
$93,430*$98,043*
$5602$4731
3540
Q # 16
Ages of College Students . the dean of students wants to see whether there is a significant difference
in ages of resident students and commuting students. she selects a sample of 50 students from each
group. the ages are shown here. at ,decide if there is enough evidence to reject the claim of
no difference in the ages of the two groups. use the P-value method. assume and
6. Book90809075809084
DVD85728080707580
Q # 4
Obstacle course times. an obstacle course was set up on a campus, and 10 volunteers were given a
chance to complete it while there were being time. they then sampled a new energy drink and were
given the opportunity to run the course again. the before and after times in seconds are shown
below. is there sufficient evidence at to conclude that the students did better the second
time? discuss possible reasons for your results.
Student12345678
Before6772807078826975
After6870766575786568
Q # 10
A random sample of six music students played a short song, and the number of mistakes each
student made was recorded. after they practiced the song 5 times, the number of mistakes each
student made was recorded. the data are shown. at , can it be concluded that there was a
decrease in the mean number of mistakes?
StudentABCDEF
Before10688138
After422789
Exercise 9-4
Q # 4
Undergraduate financial aid. a study is conducted to determine if the percent of women who receive
financial aid in undergraduate school is different from the percent of men who receive financial aid
in undergraduate school. a random sample of undergraduates revealed these results. at ,
is there significant evidence to reject the null hypothesis?