ESE 633 Statistics in Education
ESE 633 Statistics in Education
ESE 633 Statistics in Education
Statistics in Education
ASSIGNMENT (60%)
Introduction
This Guide explains the basis on which you will be assessed in this course during the semester. It
contains details of the facilitator-marked assignment.
One element in the assessment strategy of the course is that all students should have the same
information as facilitators about the Assignment.
Academic Writing
A) Plagiarism in all forms is forbidden. Students who submit plagiarised assignment will
be penalised.
i) What is Plagiarism?
Any written assignment (essays, project, take-home exams, etc) submitted by a student
must not be deceptive regarding the abilities, knowledge, or amount of work contributed by
the student. There are many ways that this rule can be violated. Among them are:
o Paraphrases: The student paraphrases a closely reasoned argument of an author
without acknowledging that he or she has done so. (Clearly, all our knowledge is
derived from somewhere, but detailed arguments from clearly identifiable sources
must be acknowledged.)
o Outright plagiarism: Large sections of the paper are simply copied from other
sources, and are not acknowledged as quotations.
o Other sources: often include essays written by other students or sold by
unscrupulous organizations. Quoting from such papers is perfectly legitimate if
quotation marks are used and the source is cited.
o Works by others: Taking credit deliberately or not deliberately for works produced
by another without giving proper acknowledgement. Works includes photographs,
charts, graphs, drawings, statistics, video-clips, audio-clips, verbal exchanges such
as interviews or lectures, performances on television and texts printed on the web.
o The student submits the same essay to two or more courses.
B) Documenting Sources
Whenever you quote, paraphrase, summarise, or otherwise refer to the work of another, you
are required to cite its original source documentation. Offered here are some of the most
commonly cited forms of material.
Direct
Simply having a thinking skill is no assurance that children will use it. In
order for such skills to become part of day-to-day behaviour, they must be
cultivated in an environment that value and sustains them. “Just as children’s
musical skills will likely lay fallow in an environment that doesn’t encourage
music, learner’s thinking skills tend to languish in a culture that doesn’t
encourage thinking” (Tishman, Perkins and Jay, 1995:5).
Indirect
According to Wurman (1988), the new disease of the 21st century will be
information anxiety, which has been defined as the ever-widening gap
between what one understands and what one thinks one should understand.
Referencing
All sources that you cite in your paper should be listed in the Reference section at the
end of your paper. Here’s how you should do your Reference.
From a Journal
DuFour, R. (2002). The learning-centred principal: Educational
Leadership, 59(8). 12-15.
From a Book
Naisbitt, J. and Aburdence, M. (1989). Megatrends 2000. London: Pan
Books.
Question 1: [4 marks]
A physical education teacher collected data on students’ height AND the span of jump (see Table
1 below:
a) What statistical procedure would you use to predict length of jump using height? Give
reasons.
b) Explain clearly two assumptions that must be met in conducting the test that you have
identified in Q1(a). Why it is important these assumptions are met?
Question 2 [9 marks]
A researcher was interested in finding out whether attitude towards English would be enhanced
when students were taught using newspapers in education.
Table 1:
Table 1 : Mean Attitude Score before and after the intervention
N Mean Std. Std. Error
Deviation Mean
Pretest 30 18.50 5.33 0.97
b) State the assumptions that should be met to use the above statistical test.
Question 3 [7 marks]
A study was conducted to assess the logical reasoning ability of male and female undergraduates.
The results of the study are shown in Table 1 and 2.
Table 1
Male 35 72 7.2
0.0005
Female 40 82 7.4
Question 4 [5 marks]
A researcher conducted a study skills course over a period of five days among a group of
beginners, intermediate and advanced speakers of English. At the end of the programme he
administered a test to determine which group of students benefited from the programme.
The results of the study was analysed using One-Way ANOVA and the results are shown in the
tables below:
Table 1
vi) What does the standard deviation tell you about the results?
Table 3
Question 6 [5 marks]
Question 7
Question 8.
State a hypothesis each using Emotional Intelligence as the dependent variable (as defined
by the factors Stress Tolerance, Optimism and Emotional Self-Awareness ) for the following:
[6 marks]
Question 9.
State the appropriate statistical tests to test the three hypotheses listed in Question 8.
[3 marks]
Question 10
State the assumptions required for the statistical test(s) used in Question 8.
[5 marks]
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Cover page:
ASSIGNMENT
MAY 2018 SEMESTER
STUDENT’S NAME :
MATRIC NO. :
PROGRAMME :
ACADEMIC :
FACILITATOR
LEARNING CENTRE :