Data Analysis with Microsoft Excel: Updated for Office 2007

(Tuis.) #1

270 Fundamentals of Statistics



  1. The Junior College workbook contains
    salary information for faculty at a col-
    lege. The female faculty members claim
    that they are underpaid relative to their
    male counterparts. Investigate their
    claim.
    a. Open the Junior College workbook
    from the Chapter06 folder and save it
    as Junior College Salary Analysis.
    b. Write down your null and alternative
    hypotheses. What is the signifi cance
    level for this test?
    c. Perform a two-sample t test on the sal-
    ary data broken down by gender. Does
    it make any difference whether you
    perform a pooled or an unpooled test?
    Do the data suggest that there is a
    salary difference between male and
    female faculty members? Create his-
    tograms of the distribution of salary
    data for male and female instructors.
    d. Redo the two-sample t test, this time
    breaking down the analysis of sal-
    ary versus gender by the Rank_Hired
    variable. Are there signifi cant gender
    differences in terms of salary for the
    various employee ranks? (Note: Some
    combinations of gender and rank hired
    will have sample sizes of 0. This will
    result in Excel displaying a #VALUE!
    result in the workbook. You can ignore
    these employee ranks because there
    are no values to investigate.)
    e. Save your workbook and summarize
    your conclusions. Is there evidence
    that the college has underpaid its
    female faculty? If so, does this differ-
    ence exist for all teaching ranks? Why
    does this study not prove sexual dis-
    crimination? What factors have been
    ignored?

  2. The Big Ten workbook has graduation
    information on Big Ten schools. (See
    Chapter 3 for a discussion of this data
    set.) Explore whether there is a


difference in the graduation rates be-
tween white male athletes and white
female athletes.
a. Open the Big Ten workbook from the
Chapter06 folder and save it as Big
Ten Graduation Analysis.
b. State your null and alternative
hypotheses.
c. Perform a paired t test of the white
male and white female athlete gradu-
ation rates. Is there statistically sig-
nifi cant evidence of a difference in
the graduation rates? What is a 95%
confi dence interval for the differ-
ence? What is the 90% confi dence
interval?
d. Redo the analysis using the Wilcoxon
Signed Rank test and the Sign test.
e. Why is this an example of paired
data?
f. Save your workbook and write a re-
port summarizing your conclusions.
Can you apply your results to univer-
sities in general? Defend your answer.


  1. The Mortgage workbook contains infor-
    mation on refusal rates from 20 lending
    institutions broken down by race and
    income status from the late 1980s. It was
    claimed in reports to Congress that lend-
    ing institutions had signifi cantly higher
    refusal rates for minorities. Examine the
    statistical basis for that claim.
    a. Open the Mortgage workbook from
    the Chapter06 folder and save it as
    Mortgage Refusal Analysis.
    b. State your null and alternative
    hypotheses.
    c. Apply a paired t test to the refusal
    rates for minority and white appli-
    cants. What is the 95% confi dence
    interval for the difference in refusal
    rates? What is the p value for the test?
    d. Create a histogram and normal prob-
    ability plot of the difference in refusal
    rate. Do the data appear normal?

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