MCS 142 Final Examination
- What: A comprehensive examination
with special emphasis on chapters 8 and 9
and topics covered in class PLUS
problems on earlier material
- When: Wednesday, December 17, 3:30-5:30 p.m.
- Where: SSC 200
- Format:
The final examination will be a closed-book examination.
You may however, use the note cards you prepared for the previous exams.
In addition, you may use the handout/document sheets,
"Statistical Hypothesis Testing" and
"Statistical Inference for Means and Proportions,"
with any notes of your own written on them--and you may write on both sides.
You may use your calculator.
Statistical tables will also be provided.
Topics that may be covered
- Much of the exam will focus on topics covered since the last exam.
- Inference for a single proportion
- Inference for two proportions
- Inference for two-way tables: the chi-square test
- The following topics,
which were merely adumbrated, will not appear in problems
everyone must do.
It's possible that a listed topic may appear in an optional problem.
- Inference for regression
- One-way ANOVA
- Some of the exam questions will relate to material we learned earlier.
- Looking at data--distributions
- Looking at data--relationships
- Sampling and experiments
- Probability, including random variables
and their distributions, means, variances, and standard deviations
- Sampling distributions
- Confidence interval basics
- Statistical hypothesis testing/tests of significance
- Inference for the mean of a population
- Comparing two means
Suggested study and preparation:
- Review the summaries at the end of each section of the text.
Make sure that you know and understand the terminology of
probability and statistics.
- Review homework problems and problems worked in class.
- Review old exams.
- Be prepared to demonstrate statistical and probabilistic thinking in context.
- Be able to distinguish parameters, statistics, variables, values, etc.,
and denote them appropriately.
- Make notes that tell you under what conditions the formulas and procedures
we have learned may be applied.
- Know how to use Table A (standard normal probabilities),
Table B (random digits), Table C (binomial probabilities),
Table D (critical t values),
and Table F (critical chi-square values),
or be prepared to do the equivalent on your calculator.
- Be prepared to calculate and interpret confidence intervals for
parameters.
- Be prepared to demonstrate your mastery of the procedure for
statistical hypothesis testing/tests of significance.
(Caution: The .htm file changed alpha to "a," sigma to "s",
and the inequality symbol to superscript 1.)
Last updated 12/8/03