It is believed that 11% of all Americans are left-handed. A college needs to know the number of left-handed desks to place in the large instructional lecture halls being constructed on its campus. In a random sample of 350 students from that college, whether or not a student was left-handed is recorded for each student. The college wants to know if the data provide enough evidence to show that students at this college have a different percentage of left-handers than the general American population. State the random variable, population parameter, and hypotheses. State the Type I and Type II errors in the context of this problem.

Holt Mcdougal Larson Pre-algebra: Student Edition 2012
1st Edition
ISBN:9780547587776
Author:HOLT MCDOUGAL
Publisher:HOLT MCDOUGAL
Chapter11: Data Analysis And Probability
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 8CR
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It is believed that 11% of all Americans are left-handed. A college needs to know the number of left-handed desks to place in the large instructional lecture halls being constructed on its campus. In a random sample of 350 students from that college, whether or not a student was left-handed is recorded for each student. The college wants to know if the data provide enough evidence to show that students at this college have a different percentage of left-handers than the general American population. State the random variable, population parameter, and hypotheses. State the Type I and Type II errors in the context of this problem.

  1. The wording for the parameter in context is as follows:          

  2. Fill in the correct null and alternative hypotheses.

    H0:H0:                      
    HA:HA:                    

  3. A Type I error in the context of this problem would be

                   

  4. A Type II error in the context of this problem would be
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