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At Lawson Middle School, Mr. Hernandez asked 90 randomly selected students, and 28 chose social studies as their favorite. He used this data to draw the inference that out of the 250 middle school students, about 20% prefer social studies. Did he make a reasonable inference? Yes, Mr. Hernandez’s sample is random, not biased, large enough compared to the population, and 28 is 20% of 250. Yes, Mr. Hernandez’s sample is random, not biased, large enough compared to the population, and 28 is 20% of 90. No, Mr. Hernandez’s sample is random, not biased, large enough compared to the population, but 28 is not 20% of 90. No, Mr. Hernandez’s sample is not large enough compared to the population.

User Holy
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2 Answers

2 votes

Answer:

C on EDG

Explanation:

User Mozharovsky
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4.8k points
5 votes

Answer:

No, Mr. Hernandez’s sample is random, not biased, large enough compared to the population, but 28 is not 20% of 90.

Explanation:

At Lawson Middle School, Mr. Hernandez asked 90 randomly selected students from each grade level for their favorite subject.

90 randomly selected students from each grade level for their favorite subject, and 28 chose social studies as their favorite.

so, the percent of students who love social studies is given by:

28/90 x 100=31.11%

He used this data to draw the inference that out of the 250 middle school students, about 20% prefer social studies.

No, Mr. Hernandez’s sample is random, not biased, large enough compared to the population, but 28 is not 20% of 90.

User Ryan Bennetts
by
5.6k points
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