138k views
2 votes
A Little League baseball coach wants to know if his team is representative of other teams in scoring runs. Nationally, the average number of runs scored by a Little League team in a game is 5.7. He chooses five games at random and finds the mean number of runs scored is 7.4 with a sample standard deviation of 2.88.

Required:
Is it likely that his team's scores is different than the national average?

1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:

That result implies that t(s) is in the acceptance region for H₀ then we accept H₀, there is not statistics difference between the LL team and the national average

Explanation:

The National average number of runs scored by a LL team is

μ = 5.7

Sample Information:

size sample n = 5

sample average x = 7.4

sample standard deviation s = 2.88

Is required to investigate if that sample average is statistically different from the National average

We will do a test with 95 % of confidence Interval that means

significance level α = 5 % or α = 0.05.

The sample size is 5 then even when we assume normal distribution the sample size indicates that we need to use t-student distribution. Furthermore, as the question is if the sample average is different from the national the test will be a two-tail test.

Then α = 0.05 α/2 = 0.025

df = n - 1 df = 5 - 1 df = 4

Then from t-student table we get t(c) = 2.132

Hypothesis test:

Null Hypothesis H₀ x = μ

Alternative Hypothesis Hₐ x ≠ μ

To calculate t (s)

t(s) = ( x - μ ) / s/√n

t(s) = ( 7.4 - 5.7 )* 2.24 / 2.88

t(s) = 1.7* 2.24 / 2.88

t(s) = 1.32

Comparing t(s) and t(c)

1.32 < 2.132

That result implies that t(s) is in the acceptance region for H₀ then we accept H₀, there is not statistics difference between the LL team and the national average

User Sarek
by
7.8k points
Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories