This is a four page analysis of survey database result. The paper covers all angles of analysis showing all trends and includes charts and graphs. The additional page for this assignment was sent to the customer as an attachment via email. The information for this paper is self-contained and was based on files sent by the customer.
¶ … Statistics
This survey was conducted as part of a class project to gather sample data on a variety of issues. The data will be used to perform statistical analysis regarding the correlation between differences in men and women. The 37 questions start with basic demographic data such as age and education and move on to cover attitudes and agreement with various topics. For each hypothesis, I will show some statistical figures along with charts to show whether or not there was any correlation present.
This survey involved 291 participants. 130 of these were male and 161 were female. Their average age is 32.7 years old. The males had an average age of 33.7 and the females had an average age of 32.2. Six of the participants had a PhD or professional degree and 85 had completed high school or received a GED. There were 102 married participants and 157 single. 138 of them lived in households with children under 18.
For my first hypothesis, I expect men to work more hours outside the home. I expect a relatively weak correlation, but slightly positive. Secondly, I expect women to be less satisfied with their current weight. Again, I expect a slightly positive correlation. Third, I expect women to eat a more healthy diet. I would expect a moderate correlation with this. My fourth hypothesis is that women are more likely to have considered becoming a foster parent. Of these four, I expect the foster parenting question to be the most strongly correlated with gender.
The correlation between the hours men and women spend working outside the home is 0.074. In other words, there is a weak correlation. The correlation leans in the direction of men having more hours. Males also had a higher average of 30.6 hours compared to 27.8 hours for females. This suggests that there is a small likelihood that males spend more hours working outside the home. Interestingly, however, only females reported over 60 hours per week. The scatterplot below shows the hours worked with females on the top axis:
Mean
29.0567
Standard Error
1.132015
Median
40
Mode
40
Standard Deviation
19.31074
Sample Variance
Kurtosis
-1.0554
Skewness
-0.26386
Range
80
Minimum
0
Maximum
80
Sum
Count
The correlation between the satisfaction with the weight in men and women is 0.097. As expected, this is also a weak correlation, but it does indicate that males are more likely to be satisfied with their weight. 46.6% of males and 37.3% of females indicated that they were satisfied with their weight. The chart below shows females in pink and men in blue. The top axis represents the number that are not satisfied with their weight and the lower axis, the ones that are.
Mean
1.584192
Standard Error
0.028942
Median
2
Mode
2
Standard Deviation
0.49371
Sample Variance
0.243749
Kurtosis
-1.89513
Skewness
-0.34342
Range
1
Minimum
1
Maximum
2
Sum
Count
The correlation of healthy eating is 0.012. This indicates that there is next to no correlation between a healthy diet in men and women. Men rated themselves 5.7 on average while women were at 5.6. This suggests that men are ever so slightly more likely to have a positive opinion of their diet. The chart below shows the comparison of men to women for each level of agreement.
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