- Feb 7, 2004
- 11,088
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Ok, I'm taking a class that the instructor assumes we are stats gurus - and we are not. . .
I had to conduct a survey, then analyze the data. I thought this was going to be easy till I sat down.
I had 100 respondents.
39 of them were not college grads
61 were
My hypothesis was that college graduates were NOT more likely to be prepared for a disaster (earthquakes, floods, etc).
I had several questions on the survey.
1. Are you a college grad? Yes/No
2. On a scale of 1-5 - five being the best - rank your knowledge of Earthquakes and what a large New Madrid earthquake will mean for the region. 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5
3. Do you have a family disaster plan? Yes/No
4. Do you have a 3-5 day non-perishable supply of food/water that does not require refridgeration? Yes/No
5. Do you or someone in your family know how to shut off water mains, gas lines, and electricity? Yes/No
6. Do you have a radio and batteries or a crank radio on hand? Yes/No
Ok - so how do I analyze these results? I never took a stats class - and don't really have a clue.
I basically want to prove that a college degree does not = prepared for a disaster.
I know my independent variable is education. I only have 2 values though - college grad or not - 0 o 1. . .
I knew I should have done stats. ..
Help!
I had to conduct a survey, then analyze the data. I thought this was going to be easy till I sat down.
I had 100 respondents.
39 of them were not college grads
61 were
My hypothesis was that college graduates were NOT more likely to be prepared for a disaster (earthquakes, floods, etc).
I had several questions on the survey.
1. Are you a college grad? Yes/No
2. On a scale of 1-5 - five being the best - rank your knowledge of Earthquakes and what a large New Madrid earthquake will mean for the region. 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5
3. Do you have a family disaster plan? Yes/No
4. Do you have a 3-5 day non-perishable supply of food/water that does not require refridgeration? Yes/No
5. Do you or someone in your family know how to shut off water mains, gas lines, and electricity? Yes/No
6. Do you have a radio and batteries or a crank radio on hand? Yes/No
Ok - so how do I analyze these results? I never took a stats class - and don't really have a clue.
I basically want to prove that a college degree does not = prepared for a disaster.
I know my independent variable is education. I only have 2 values though - college grad or not - 0 o 1. . .
I knew I should have done stats. ..
Help!