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Kim wants to know how many families in her small neighborhood of 70 homes would participate in a neighborhood sports event. She put all the addresses in a bag and drew a random sample of 35 addresses. She then asked those families if they would participate in the sports event. She found that 15% of the families would participate in the event. She claims that 15% of the neighborhood families would be expected to participate in the sports event. Is this a valid inference? Yes, this is a valid inference because she took a random sample of the neighborhood Yes, this is a valid inference because the 35 families speak for the whole neighborhood No, this is not a valid inference because she asked only 35 families No, this is not a valid inference because she did not take a random sample of the neighborhood

2 Answers

4 votes

Answer:

the guy above me, believe what he says

Step-by-step explanation:

he's right

User Stankovski
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In general, no, this is not a valid inference because she did not take a random sample of the neighborhood. The sample size would need to be increased.
User Andreagalle
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