502,101 views
17 votes
17 votes
A teacher tells her students that a large jar of marbles contains 55% red marbles. students randomly select a sample of 40 marbles and determined the proportion of red marbles. one sample a student selected contained 16 red marbles. assuming the teacher’s claim is true, 100 simulated proportions are displayed in the dotplot. using the dotplot and sample proportion, is there convincing evidence that the teacher’s claim is false? yes, because a proportion of 0.40 or more occurred 98 out of 100 times, the sample proportion of red marbles is statistically significant and there is convincing evidence that the teacher’s claim is false. yes, because a proportion of 0.40 or less occurred only 2 out of 100 times, the sample proportion of red marbles is statistically significant and there is convincing evidence that the teacher’s claim is false. no, because a proportion of 0.40 or more occurred 98 out of 100 times, the sample proportion of red marbles is not statistically significant and there is not convincing evidence that the teacher’s claim is false. no, because a proportion of 0.40 or less occurred 2 out of 100 times, the sample proportion of red marbles is not statistically significant and there is not convincing evidence that the teacher’s claim is false.

User Robin Sving
by
3.1k points

1 Answer

9 votes
9 votes

Answer:

b

Step-by-step explanation:

b

User Jeffrey Cordero
by
2.4k points