Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 3

Nama : Eko

NIM : 2307030260

1. Which one of the following is quantitative data?


a. The pen is a white
b. She has a long hair
c. She has two ears
d. She has a long hair
2. Which one of the following is continuous data?
a. She has two eyes
b. She weight 56.7 kg
c. She has five cars
d. She has two ears
3. Which one of the following is discrete data?
a. She is 122.3 cm high.
b. She weight 45.7 kg
c. She has 30 teeth
d. The box is 43.6 cm long
4. Which one of the following is NOT quantitative data?
a. The snake is 70 cm long
b. The snake is black
c. The snake has two eyes
d. The snake has no legs
5. Which of the following is not quantitative data?
a. What emotion you are feeling after watching a horror movie
b. How many cigarettes a sample of smokers smoker per day
c. What score you got on a test
d. How much water individuals drink per day
6. Which of the following is true about nominal scales?
a. The data are generally categorical
b. Height in feet is an example of a nominal scale
7. Which of the following best describes a nominal scale?
a. Proportion of male to female in a classroom.
b. Number of words a child can identify from a test bank.
c. How often individuals in a sample texts per day.
8. Nominal scales are by nature...
a. quantitative
b. qualitative
9. Which of the following is true of nominal scales?
a. Much like qualitative data, nominal scales are generally categories of different
numbers that reflect how often or frequent an event occurs
b. Nominal scales represent categories and can be counted
c. Nominal scales represent how often an event occurs
d. Nominal scales generally tell us descriptive information about what
happened, when it happened, and how many times it happened
10. In comparing ordinal scales to nominal scales, which is true?
a. Ordinal and nominal scales are both quantitative, but ordinal scales allow addition
and subtraction.
b. Ordinal scales tell us what category a datum falls into but nominal scales tell us
about frequency of events.
c. Ordinal scales have rank order whereas nominal scales do not.
d. Country of origin is an ordinal scale, and weekly exercise frequency
measured in hours is on a nominal scale.
11. Which of the following is on an ordinal scale but not interval or ratio scale?
a. Temperature measured in Fahrenheit
b. Number of AA batteries used in a year
c. Cups of coffee drank per day
d. Placement in a race
12. Which of the following does not describe ordinal scale?
a. Ranking individuals by their socioeconomic status
b. Ranking from 1 to 5 how satisfied consumers were with service
c. Students' class rank
d. Number of AA batteries used in a year
13. Which of the following is false about ordinal scales?
a. they are qualitative data
b. they do not have a true 0 point
c. the distance between any two ranks are equal
d. You magnitude of the numbers is not arbitrary. 4 is larger than 3
14. Interval and Ratio scales both lead to obtaining what type of data?
a. Quantitative
b. Qualitative
15. What are panel data?
a. Data containing units measured at different time points
b. Data where each unit is measured at more than one time point
c. Data measured at one point in time
16. Gender is categorized as:
a. Nominal
b. Ordinal
c. Interval
d. Ratio
17. A researchers studies the factors that determine the number of children future couples
decide to have. The variable ‘number of children’ is
a. Discrete variable
b. Continuous variable
c. Ordinal variable
18. A subgroup that is representative of a population is called
a. a categori
b. data
c. a sample
19. Statistical inference is
a. the process of estimates and conclusions carefully based on data from a sample
b. the process of estimates and conclusions carefully based on data from an entire
population
c. pictorial displays that summarize data
20. Statistical descriptive is
a. the process of estimates and conclusions carefully based on data from a sample
b. the process of estimates and conclusions carefully based on data from an entire
population
c. pictorial displays that summarize data

1.1.1. Self Tes


1. Determine whether the following variables are quantitative or qualitative:
a. salary of professional baseball players (Quantitative)
b. the number of runs scored in a baseball game (Quantitative)
c. the numbers on the jerseys of baseball players(Qualitative)
d. whether the mascot is a Lion, Tiger, or Yankee (Qualitative)
2. Determine whether the following variables are cross-sectional or time series:
a. the daily temperature in Semarang each day in August (Time series)
b. the population of Hangzhou each year from 1900 to 2000 (Time series)
c. the age, salary, and marital status of the Hangzhou city council (Cross-sectional)
3. Determine whether these variables are discrete or continuous:
a. the number of extras used in the Benjamin Buttons movie (Discrete)
b. the amount of money spent marketing the movie (Continuous)
c. the number of scenes of the movie (Discrete)
d. the average length of the scenes in the movie (Continuous)
4. Determine the level of measurement (nominal, ordinal, interval, or ratio) of the
following variables:
a. the temperature in Salatiga on a given day (Interval)
b. whether or not the day is considered “blue sky” or not (i.e., overcast) (Nominal)
c. the wind speed in Shanghai in kilometers per hour d. the amount of rainfall in
Shanghai in centimeters (Ratio)
d. whether the air quality is consider clear, polluted, or highly polluted. (Ordinal)

You might also like