State:
Plan:
Do:
Conclude:
Animal Facts
100

The variable that represents sample size

What is "n"?

100

The first of our three conditions to check

What is "random"?

100

The standardized test statistic we find when testing for difference in proportion

What is z?

100

The variable for our significance value

What is alpha?

100

This is the sound a doggy makes

What is "bark"?

200

This is the variable for our sample proportion

What is p-hat?

200

The three conditions that must be met before performing a Significance Test for difference in proportion

What are "Random," "10%," and "Large Counts"?

200

We find this variable by adding together the "yes's" from both samples and dividing by the sum of the sample sizes

What is p-hat?

200

Our default significance value if none is given

What is alpha equals 0.05?

200

A name for a baby kangaroo

What is "Joey?"

300

Our null hypotheses most commonly equal this number.

What is zero?

300

If we do this, we don't need to do the 10% condition

What is random assignment?

300

The way we find our p-value if our alternative hypothesis says "less than"

What is "plug z-score into Table A?"

300

Our conclusion if P<alpha

What is "reject H0"?

300

Alvin's cohorts in this animal band

Who are Simon and Theodore?

400

Kara works for a website that is considering sending emails with different types of coupons to its customers. She suspects that coupons offering $10 off will be used more often than coupons offering 20% off. She plans on sending each type of coupon to a separate random sample of users. She'll then test if the proportion of customers who use the $10 off coupon is significantly larger than the proportion who use the 20% off coupon.

Kara's parameters for her significance test

What is 

p1 = the proportion of users who use the $10 coupon

p2 = the proportion of users who use the 20% off coupon


or

p2 = the proportion of users who use the $10 coupon

p1 = the proportion of users who use the 20% off coupon

400

Our 10% rule says that each population must be larger than the sample multiplied by what?

What is "10"?

400

Wha we do to our P-value if our alternative hypothesis says "does not equal"

What is "multiply it by two?"
400

Our conclusion if P>alpha

What is "Fail to reject H0?"

400

A friend of the hound, this mammal has a rather unsettling call

What is "fox"?

500

Faith is in charge of a website campaign that shows a banner asking users to make a donation when they visit the site. She has two designs for the banner in mind: design A and design B. She suspects that design A will lead to a larger proportion of users making a donation. She wants to test her hypothesis by randomly assigning each user one of the two designs over the course of a week.

These are Faith's parameters and hypotheses

What are

H0: p1 - p2 = 0

Ha: p1 - p2 >0

If p1 = proportion who favor design A

or

H0: p1 - p2 = 0

Ha: p1 - p2 <0

If p1 = proportion who favor design B

500

Our least favorite condition: the Large Counts conditions says that these must be greater than or equal to ten.

What is p*n and p*(1-n) for both samples?

500

The z-score if n1=100, p-hat1=0.48, n2=80,            p-hat2=0.3, and p-hat=0.4

What is 2.45?

500

What our P-value tells us

What is "the probability of getting our results if H0 is true?"

500

Before appearing on Game of Thrones, Peter Dinklage played the nemesis of this furrocious hero

Who is Underdog?