sociology discussion help

Work, Unemployment, and Poverty

Choose a major transnational corporation that is headquartered in the United States and find information regarding the other countries this corporation has offices or plants. Research what the corporation does at these locations (the type of business conducted) and whom they hire.

In 250 words or more, summarize this information in the initial discussion as well as answers to the following questions:

1. How does the corporation affect the people in these other countries, including effects on the community as well as the people who work for the corporation?

2. What are the possible effects on the United States of this corporation’s transnational locations (such as reduction of U.S. jobs)? Then go to the website of the International Labour Organization at www.ilo.org. Conduct a search for the transnational organization you researched to discover any labor issues related to this corporation. Post your findings and answers on the discussion board.

essay five pages

HUMA.doc I need 5 pages essay about Gilgamesh , chose one of these themes to write about , you have to read  ( THE NORTON ANTHOLOGY WORLD LITERATURE ) to know about Gligamesh . and you have to follow the rules on the attachment  that I posted 

Major Themes

Love and Friendship

When we first meet Gilgamesh, he is a tyrant king who terrifies the people of Uruk. Only after meeting Enkidu and becoming his friend does Gilgamesh transform into a hero worthy of memory. This transformative effect is also exacted on Enkidu, who Gilgamesh helps move beyond his fears. The platonic love the two have for each other helps Gilgamesh become a better leader to his people by allowing him to better understand and identify with them. When considered in tandem with the theme of death in the poem, love and friendship can be viewed not only as a part of life, but as a necessary component to give existence meaning.

Death

The major theme of the poem is that of mortality. Gilgamesh must learn the difficult lesson that, even as a king, he too must face the reality of his own death. On their way to the Cedar Forst to face Humbaba, Enkidu expresses his concerns about death, which Gilgamesh laughs off, telling Enkidu that no one lives forever and that life is short. However, when Enkidu dies, Gilgamesh is so distraught that he seeks out Utnapishtim to learn the secret of immortality. Despite his hopes, Utnapishtim tells Gilgamesh the story of the flood. He explains to Gilgamesh that the quest for immortality is a futile one, as creation itself also contains the seed of death, making it inescapable. The Gods, he explains, intentionally did this. Gilgamesh returns to Uruk having learned that the quality of one’s life is measured not by wealth or fame, but by the quality of the time he spent while alive and the people with which he surrounded himself.

The Hero’s Journey or Quest

A common theme in mythology and ancient stories, Gilgamesh’s story is no exception. The hero must embark on a journey or quest in order to discover who he is. Initially, Enkidu travels from the wilderness with Shamhat to civilization to meet Gilgamesh. Gilgamesh begins his quest with Enkidu by traveling to the Cedar Forest to defeat Humbaba. After Enkidu’s death, Gilgamesh’s personal journey begins. He seeks out Utnapishtim to learn the secret of immortality. His journey concludes with his return to Uruk. In this case, Gilgamesh’s journey is a direct reflection of his internal struggle and “journey” to become a better, selfless leader.

The Wrath of the Gods

Gilgamesh expresses his jealousy towards the gods and the immortality they enjoy. He and Enkidu learn firsthand that incurring the wrath of the gods can have disastrous consequences. Rather than wise, omniscient beings, the gods in Gilgamesh are vengeful and easily angered. Gilgamesh and Enkidu first encounter this wrath after Gilgamesh rejects Ishtar’s advances. Ishtar immediately turns to her father, Anu, to send the Bull of Heaven to punish Gilgamesh. At first, Anu rejects Ishtar’s request but she threatens to raise the dead to devour the living. Anu is frightened by Ishtar’s threat and releases the Bull of Heaven to appease her. When Gilgamesh and Enkidu slay the Bull of Heaven, they further insult Ishtar by throwing the Bull’s hindquarters at her face. Enkidu later dreams that the gods have decided that he must die for these transgressions. After twelve days of suffering, he dies a painful death.

Utnapishtim also tells Gilgamesh the story of a great flood exacted on the people of Shurrupak. Ea informs Utnapishtim of the coming flood and instructs him to build a great boat and to stock that boat with all the creatures of the land. It is important to note that when Utnapishtim asks Ea about why the flood is coming and about whathe should tell the people of Shurrupak, Ea has no specific answer for him, stating only that Enlil is angry. This suggests that the wrath of the gods can also be incurred without any obvious insult or explanation.

Gateways

Gateways and doors by their very nature symbolize separation, but also transition. Although a physical doorway is not present in the beginning, Enkidu must transition from the wilderness to civilization. In this sense, Shamhat herself represents a gateway. Enkidu then enters Uruk with Shamhat, passing through the city’s great walls. Enkidu and Gilgamesh later discuss Enkidu’s fear at the gate to the Cedar Forest. They cut down the tallest tree in the forest to make into a gate for Uruk. On his journey to find Utnapishtim, Gilgamesh must pass through the gate of Mashu, guarded by the Scorpion men. At each point when a gateway is encountered, a decision must be made by Gilgamesh or Enkidu as to whether they will continue or turn back. Utilized in this manner, gateways also serve as an effective literary device to force characters to make decisions that affect the overall narrative.

Baptism or Ritual Cleansing

Water is continually used by characters in Gilgamesh at key points in the story to wash themselves but also marks an important point of transition. In this way, water is used in a baptismal manner. Enkidu washes himself after meeting Shamhat, marking his transition from the wilderness to civilization. Gilgamesh and Enkidu wash themselves after slaying the Bull of Heaven. Gilgamesh bathes himself after acquiring the magic plant to achieve immortality. In each case, a ritual cleansing marks an important moment in the story. Enkidu is transformed, leaving behind the world of animals and nature and entering the world of humans. Gilgamesh loses the magic plant but transitions to accepting his mortality.

Responsibility

Gilgamesh is introduced to us as a tyrant king who does as he pleases and has little regard for his subjects. Aruru creates Enkidu to strike a balance against Gilgamesh’s tyrannical ways. His purpose in the story is to help Gilgamesh become the king he needs to be and to teach him about what is most valuable in life. Through this ordeal, Gilgamesh loses his best friend and must face reality. The recklessness with which he previously had lived his life is evidently unsustainable. Gilgamesh learns that just as he will not live forever, he will age, and with that age must come maturity and wisdom if he is to live a life worth living.

chemistry spectroscopy

spectroscopy .pdf

summarize article please only need a paragraph

summarize article – Only need a paragraph or two w 1 in-text citation  MLA format.

I just need to see how this is done so I have a guide.

Article-

Goodwin, Bryan. “Grade Inflation: Killing With Kindness?.” Educational Leadership 69.3

(2011): 80-81. Education Research Complete. Web. 1 Feb. 2013.

Students and their parents should expect high school grades to serve as reliable benchmarks by which to measure students’ readiness for college

In the 1880s, Harvard University adopted a new approach to evaluating student work that would sweep the United States and become as integral a part of the education landscape as blackboards, number 2 pencils, and yellow buses: the letter grade. Just one decade later, though, some Harvard professors were already grousing that “in the present practice Grades A and B are sometimes given too readily — Grade A for work of no very high merit, and Grade B for work not far above mediocrity” (Lewis, 2006, p. 115). They fretted that if the outside world knew what kind of “sham work” passed for high marks at the venerable institution, Harvard’s degree would be “seriously cheapened” (p. 115).

Hand-wringing about grade inflation has continued ever since. The fact that so many people could worry about the same phenomenon for so long makes one wonder whether the concerns are grounded in reality or are merely generational grumblings about the declining standards of youth.

Not Your Parents’ A?

Recent data have a new generation of critics worrying that today’s high school grades may not be what they once were:

* Between 1991 and 2003, the mathematics grades of high school students taking the ACT exam rose from a grade point average of 2.80 to 3.04, whereas their average scores on the math portion of the ACT rose only slightly, from 20.04 to 20.55 on a 36-point scale. Similarly, average English grades rose from a grade point average of 3.04 to 3.29, whereas ACT English scores nudged up from 20.22 to 20.44. ACT concluded that the higher GPAs reflected grade inflation rather than an increase in achievement (Woodruff & Ziomek, 2004).

* Nearly twice as many high school students reported earning an A or A- average in 2006 than in 1992 (32.8 percent versus 18.3 percent) (Twenge & Campell, in press).

* In 2007, two federal reports found that the performance of U.S. high school students on the reading portion of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) had declined between 1992 and 2005, even though students reported getting higher grades (GPAs rose from 2.68 in 1990 to 2.98 in 2005) and taking tougher classes (the percentage of students who said they took college-preparatory classes rose from 5 to 10 percent) (Schmidt, 2007).

Are Concerns Overblown?

Some critics dismiss such data because the studies rely on students self-reporting their grades to test makers. As Alfie Kohn (2002) writes, “self-reports are notoriously unreliable” (p. B7). Translation: Higher grades might simply reflect students becoming more “truth challenged” than in the past. ACT, however, has compared self-reported grades with school transcripts and found the grades to be “sufficiently accurate” for use in research (Sawyer, Laing, & Houston, 1988).

Others argue, though, that our real concern shouldn’t be whether today’s grades are more lax (perhaps the grades of yesteryear unfairly discriminated against students), but whether they inaccurately assess student learning. In fact, there’s some evidence that good marks in high school may not represent the imprimatur of college preparedness that we expect. In Oregon, trained reviewers analyzed the

in-class work of 2,200 high school students against university professors’ standards for college-entry work. Their analysis revealed that “only the students who were being awarded As in high school were likely to meet the standard, and even within this group, sizeable numbers of students … did not [demonstrate] the minimum level for [college] admission” (Conley 2000, p. 19). The fact that most B students (and some A students) were not doing work on par with entry-level college standards prompted the researchers to conclude that grade inflation is “a real phenomenon” (p. 19).

Why Does It Occur?

Many explanations have been offered for grade inflation, starting with teachers (one-half, in one study) basing grades on factors only indirectly related to student performance, including effort, ability, behavior, and attitude (Bursuck et al, 1996). Grading, especially in low-income schools, may reflect a hidden curriculum of compliance and control, in which teachers use grades as carrots and sticks to keep students in line. “In troubled schools,” concluded one team of researchers, “good behavior may, in fact, replace achievement as the desired response of students” (Howley Kusimo, & Parrott, 2000).

Turnbull (1985) observed that grade inflation began in earnest in the 1960s, as high schools scrambled to assimilate the swelling ranks of baby boom students while, at the same time, the college attendance rate doubled from 25 to 50 percent of students between 1952 and 1970. A large “group of students staying past the legal school-leaving age whose preparation was weak by historical standards,” Turnbull conjectured, gave schools the choice of either inflating grades or flunking large numbers of students (pp. 8-9).

They might have opted for a third path, of course — keeping standards high while providing better instruction, a stronger curriculum, and help for struggling students. Instead, many schools appear to have taken the easy way out by inflating grades.

Should We Care?

In light of the fact that extrinsic rewards, such as grades, may have weak or even negative effects on student motivation, how concerned should we be about grade inflation? After all, as Kohn (2002) and others have argued, tougher grades don’t necessarily translate into better learning. Arguably, though, students and their parents should expect high school grades to at least serve as reliable benchmarks by which to measure students’ readiness for college.

Nationwide, 30 percent of freshmen at U.S. four-year institutions drop out during or after their first year of college. These dropouts and their families incur enormous personal expenses and cost taxpayers more than $9 billion in wasted state appropriations and student grants over a five-year period (Schneider, 2010). One wonders how many of these dropouts got good grades in high school, only to discover on entering college that their schools, by lavishing them with unrealistically high marks, may have actually been killing them with kindness.

There’s some evidence that good marks in high school may not represent the imprimatur of college preparedness that we expect.

References

Bursuck, W, Polloway, E. A., Plante, L, Epstein, M. H., Jayanthis, M., & McConegy, J. (1996). Report card grading and adaptations: A national survey of classroom practices. Exceptional Children, 6(4), 301-318.

Conley D. (2000, April). Who is proficient: The relationship between proficiency scores and grades. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association, New Orleans, LA.

Howley A., Kusimo, R S., & Parrott, L. (2000). Grading and the ethos of effort. Learning Environments Research, 3(3), 229-246.

Kohn, A. (2002, November 8). The dangerous myth of grade inflation. Chronicle of Higher Education, 49(11), B7.

Lewis, H. R. (2006). Excellence without a soul: How a great university forgot education. New York: Public Affairs.

Sawyer, R., Laing, J., & Houston, M. (1988). Accuracy of self-reported high school courses and grades of college-hound students (ACT Research Report No. 88-1). Iowa City IA: ACT.

Schmidt, P. (2007, March 9). High-school students aim higher without learning more, federal studies find. Chronicle of Higher Education, 53(27), A32.

Schneider, M. (2010). Finishing the first lap: The cost of first-year student attrition in America’s four-year colleges and universities. Washington, DC: American Institutes of Research.

Turnbull, W. W. (1985). Student change, program change: Why the SAT scores kept falling (College Board Report No. 85-2). New York: College Entrance Examination Board.

Twenge, J. M., & Campbell, W. K. (in press). Increases in self-views among high school students: Birth cohort changes in anticipated performance, self-satisfaction, self-liking and self-competence. Psychological Science.

Woodruff, D. J., & Ziomek, R. L. (2004). High school grade inflation from 1991 to 2003. Iowa City IA: ACT.

~~~~~~~~

By Bryan Goodwin

Bryan Goodwin is vice president of communications, McREL, Denver, Colorado; goodwin@mcrel.org. He is the author of Simply Better: What Matters Most to Change the Odds for Student Success (ASCD, 2011).


Copyright of Educational Leadership is the property of Association for Supervision & Curriculum Development and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder’s express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use.

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statistical thinking in health care 1

Read the following case study.

Ben Davis had just completed an intensive course in Statistical Thinking for Business Improvement, which was offered to all employees of a large health maintenance organization. There was no time to celebrate, however, because he was already under a lot of pressure. Ben works as a pharmacist’s assistant in the HMO’s pharmacy, and his manager, Juan de Pacotilla, was about to be fired. Juan’s dismissal appeared to be imminent due to numerous complaints and even a few lawsuits over inaccurate prescriptions. Juan now was asking Ben for his assistance in trying to resolve the problem, preferably yesterday!

“Ben, I really need your help! If I can’t show some major improvement or at least a solid plan by next month, I’m history.”
“I’ll be glad to help, Juan, but what can I do? I’m just a pharmacist’s assistant.”
“I don’t care what your job title is; I think you’re just the person who can get this done. I realize I’ve been too far removed from day-to-day operations in the pharmacy, but you work there every day. You’re in a much better position to find out how to fix the problem. Just tell me what to do, and I’ll do it.”
“But what about the statistical consultant you hired to analyze the data on inaccurate prescriptions?”
“Ben, to be honest, I’m really disappointed with that guy. He has spent two weeks trying to come up with a new modeling approach to predict weekly inaccurate prescriptions. I tried to explain to him that I don’t want to predict the mistakes, I want to eliminate them! I don’t think I got through, however, because he said we need a month of additional data to verify the model, and then he can apply a new method he just read about in a journal to identify ‘change points in the time series,’ whatever that means. But get this, he will only identify the change points and send me a list; he says it’s my job to figure out what they mean and how to respond. I don’t know much about statistics — the only thing I remember from my course in college is that it was the worst course I ever took– but I’m becoming convinced that it actually doesn’t have much to offer in solving real problems. You’ve just gone through this statistical thinking course, though, so maybe you can see something I can’t. To me, statistical thinking sounds like an oxymoron. I realize it’s a long shot, but I was hoping you could use this as the project you need to officially complete the course.”

“I see your point, Juan. I felt the same way, too. This course was interesting, though, because it didn’t focus on crunching numbers. I have some ideas about how we can approach making improvements in prescription accuracy, and I think this would be a great project. We may not be able to solve it ourselves, however. As you know, there is a lot of finger-pointing going on; the pharmacists blame sloppy handwriting and incomplete instructions from doctors for the problem; doctors blame pharmacy assistants like me who actually do most of the computer entry of the prescriptions, claiming that we are incompetent; and the assistants tend to blame the pharmacists for assuming too much about our knowledge of medical terminology, brand names, known drug interactions, and so on.”
“It sounds like there’s no hope, Ben!”

“I wouldn’t say that at all, Juan. It’s just that there may be no quick fix we can do by ourselves in the pharmacy. Let me explain how I’m thinking about this and how I would propose attacking the problem using what I just learned in the statistical thinking course.”

Source: G. C. Britz, D. W. Emerling, L. B. Hare, R. W. Hoerl, & J. E. Shade. “How to Teach Others to Apply Statistical Thinking.” Quality Progress (June 1997): 67–80.

Assuming the role of Ben Davis, write a three to four (3-4) page paper in which you apply the approach discussed in the textbook to this problem. You’ll have to make some assumptions about the processes used by the HMO pharmacy. Also, please use the Internet and / or Strayer LRC to research articles on common problems or errors that pharmacies face. Your paper should address the following points:

  1. Develop a process map about the prescription filling process for HMO’s pharmacy, in which you specify the key problems that the HMO’s pharmacy might be experiencing. Next, use the supplier, input, process steps, output, and customer (SIPOC) model to analyze the HMO pharmacy’s business process.
  2. Analyze the process map and SIPOC model to identify possible main root causes of the problems. Next, categorize whether the main root causes of the problem are special causes or common causes. Provide a rationale for your response.
  3. Suggest the main tools that you would use and the data that you would collect in order to analyze the business process and correct the problem. Justify your response.
  4. Propose one (1) solution to the HMO pharmacy’s on-going problem(s) and propose one (1) strategy to measure the aforementioned solution. Provide a rationale for your response.
  5. Use at least two (2) quality references. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not qualify as academic resources.

Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:

  • Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA format. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
  • Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student’s name, the professor’s name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length.

The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:

  • •Describe how organizations use statistical thinking to be more competitive.
  • •Apply the basic principles of statistical thinking to business processes.
  • •Apply the SIPOC model to identify OFIs in business processes.
  • •Use technology and information resources to research issues in business process improvement.
  • •Write clearly and concisely about business process improvement using proper writing mechanics.

Thoughts on the Case Study

  1. Develop a process map about the prescription filling process for HMO’s pharmacy, in which you specify the key problems that the HMO’s pharmacy might be experiencing. Next, use the supplier, input, process steps, output, and customer (SIPOC) model to analyze the HMO pharmacy’s business process.

In this paragraph, you may find out what is the pharmacy medication dispense process.  In your pharmacy, please identify your supplier (S), input (I), process (P), output (O) and customers (C).  Once you map out the process, you may identify some potential errors, you ca also make suggestions on how you can take proper data to improve the process.

There are many references you may find on the Internet.  Some examples include

http://www.thinkreliability.com/hc-medicationerror.aspx

http://tdapharm.hubpages.com/hub/How-are-Medications-Filled-in-a-Pharmacy

You may also get additional information on pharmacy operations in the reference PowerPoint file.

  1. Analyze the process map and SIPOC model to identify possible main root causes of the problems. Next, categorize whether the main root causes of the problem are special causes or common causes. Provide a rationale for your response.

Please describe some most likely root cause(s) of errors or customer complaints (Pick top 3 causes).  Please discuss if those causes are common cause or special causes in the process.  Please discuss the reasons for your causes.

  1. Suggest the main tools that you would use and the data that you would collect in order to analyze the business process and correct the problem. Justify your response.

Please discuss the tools (knowledge tools, subject matter expert opinions, data collections or numerical tools etc.) you would recommend that may help you identify the root causes or solve the customer complaints.  Please note the practical limitation of the recommended tools.

  1. Propose one (1) solution to the HMO pharmacy’s on-going problem(s) and propose one (1) strategy to measure the aforementioned solution. Provide a rationale for your response.

In this paragraph, please provide at least one problem-solving approach for the HMO pharmacy.  Please clearly identify what is the problem you are solving in the approach?  How would you solve it?  How do you know (measure) your success or effectiveness?

  1. Use at least two (2) quality references. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not qualify as academic resources.

Give your references.

statistics questions in jump

BUS ADM 210 – Spring 2015 Computer Project Dr. Cathy Poliak

Due: May 7, 2015 at 11:59 pm.

Instructions:  

  • Follow the directions for each problem.
  • Use JMP for all the calculations.
  • The data sets needed are available in Contents page of D2L in the Computer Project module. 
  • Create one file for your project.
  • Download the project in a D2L dropbox called Computer Project.
  • Answer all the questions thoroughly, hand in the answers to the questions fully with JMP outputs. Cut and paste the JMP output into Word or other document software to create only one file.  
  • Organize your responses with respect to the problems given.
  • If there are any questions do not hesitate to ask your TA or instructor.
  • Working with other students is fine. However, each student’s project must be a product of his/her own solutions of the problems. This is to be your own work. Any projects that are exactly the same will not be graded.
  • Total possible points 50.

Datasets:

  • You create your own.  A sample of 45 gas station prices of regular unleaded gasoline.
  • Houses sp 15.JMP: A random sample of 24 houses for sale in the area around UWM.  Variables are: List Price of a home, Price, number of bedrooms, Bed and size of the house, Square Feet.
  • Airline.JMP: A Two-way table that compares airlines to on-time status.

Problem 1: (5 points) Because of the talk about gas prices we want to know information about the price of regular unleaded gasoline for the gas stations in the Milwaukee area.

  • What is the population of interest?  
  • Find the gas prices of regular unleaded gasoline for 45 gas stations in the Milwaukee area.  Hint: You can use any online source as in AAA or gasbuddy.com or you can drive around.  Describe how you found the sample of 45 gas stations.  Here is the website for AAA: http://aaa.opisnet.com/index.aspx 
  • Construct a histogram of the regular unleaded gasoline prices that you found.  Describe the distribution of this variable.  Give the shape, center, and spread according to the histogram. 
  • Determine the following descriptive statistics from your sample of gasoline prices.
    • mean
    • standard deviation
    • median
    • Q1 the first quartile 
    • Q3 the third quartile

Problem 2: (22 points)We are interested in estimating the mean price of unleaded gasoline in the Milwaukee area.  The following will give us this estimation.

  • Using your data that you found in Problem 1, determine a 99% confidence interval for the mean gasoline prices. 
  • Give an interpretation of this confidence interval.
  • Last month, AAA gave an average gasoline price of $2.29 in Milwaukee.  According to your data can we say there is a significant difference in the mean gasoline prices compared to month ago?  
    • Give the null and alternative hypothesis
    • Describe the assumptions of this hypothesis test.  Determine if the test statistic you are using is appropriate.  Fully explain.
    • Determine the p-value
    • Give a conclusion of this hypothesis test. Use α = 0.01.
    • Compare the results of the significance test to the 99% confidence interval for the mean gasoline price per gallon.  Does the conclusion in part iv still hold for the confidence interval? Fully explain.

This part (c) is to test Quantitative Literacy and will be graded by the following rubric.

Assessment Rubric (points) 

Learning Outcome

Assessment Item

4

3

2

1

Students will recognize and construct mathematical models and/or hypotheses that represent quantitative information.

Give the null and alternative hypotheses to determine if the mean gasoline price per gallon has significantly changed from last year’s price.

Skillfully converts relevant information into an appropriate and desired hypothesis that contributes to a further or deeper understanding.

Competently converts relevant information into an appropriate and desired hypothesis. 

Completes conversion relevant information into a hypothesis but is only partially appropriate or accurate.

Completes conversion relevant information into a hypothesis but is inappropriate or inaccurate.

Students will evaluate the validity of these models and hypothesis.

Describe the assumptions of this hypothesis test.  Determine if the test statistic you are using is appropriate.

Explicitly describes the assumptions of the hypothesis test and provides compelling rationale for why this test statistic is appropriate.  Shows awareness that confidence in final conclusions is limited by the accuracy of this hypothesis.

Explicitly describes the assumptions of the hypothesis test and provides compelling rationale for why this test statistic is appropriate.

Explicitly describes the assumptions of the hypothesis test.

Attempts to describe the assumptions of the hypotheses test.

Students will analyze and manipulate mathematical models using quantitative information.

Determine the p-value of this significance test.

Analyses are attempted and all are successful to answer the problem.  Analyses are also presented elegantly. (clearly, concisely, etc.)

Analyses are attempted and all are successful to answer the problem.  

Analyses are attempted and some are successful to answer the problem.  

Analyses are attempted but are incorrect to answer the problem.  

Students will reach logical conclusions, predictions, or inferences.

Give the conclusion of this significance test, use 0.01 as the level of significance.

Provides correct conclusion based on the quantitative information derived.  Makes appropriate inferences based on that information.

Provides correct conclusion based on the quantitative information derived.  

Provides somewhat correct conclusion based on the quantitative information derived, but may have some wrong conclusions.

Attempts to provide correct conclusion based on the information, but draws incorrect conclusions about what the information means.

Students will assess the reasonableness of their conclusions.

Compare the results of the significance test to the 99% confidence interval for the mean gasoline price per gallon.Does the conclusion in part iv still hold for the confidence interval? 

Uses the quantitative information effectively as a basis for deep and thoughtful judgments, drawing insightful, carefully qualified assessment for the reasonableness of their conclusions.

Uses the quantitative information as a basis for competent judgments, drawing reasonable and appropriately qualified assessment for the reasonableness of their conclusions.

Uses the quantitative information effectively as a basis for workmanlike (without inspiration) judgments, drawing plausible assessment for the reasonableness of their conclusions.

Uses the quantitative information as a basis for tentative, basic judgments assessment for the reasonableness of their conclusions.

Problem 3: (8 points) Using the JMP dataset Houses sp 15.JMP, we want to determine if the size of the house (Square feet)can predict the list price (Price).  

  • Give a scatterplot of Price (y-axis) and Square feet (x-axis).  Describe the relationship between price and size by describing the form, direction and strength. Note any outliers or influential points.
  • Estimate the correlation coefficient between Price and Square feet.
  • Determine the simple linear regression line equation to predict Price by Square feet of the house.
  • What is the slope b1?  Give the interpretation of what that means about the Price with respect to Square Feet.
  • Using the regression equation, predict the Price of a house that is 1,800 sq ft.
  • What percent of variation in Price can be explained by this regression equation?

Problem 4: (10 points) Using the JMP dataset Houses sp 15.JMP,, we are going to look at the difference between the mean price of a 4-bedroom house compared to the mean price of a 3-bedroom house.

  • Give the summary statistics for price of 4-bedroom houses and the price of 4-bedroom houses. Hint: you can use Bed as the “by variables” in the dialog box for “Distribution.”
  • Create a boxplot of the pricebetween 4-bedroom houses and 3-bedroom houses.  Write out similarities or differences to the list price of the houses compared to number of bedrooms. 
  • Determine a 98% confidence for the difference for the mean price4-bedroom houses and 3-bedroom houses.  
  • Are the mean house prices for a 3 bedroom house significantly less than the mean house prices for 4 bedroom houses? 
  • Give the null and alternative hypothesis.
  • Give the p-value. 
  • Make a decision of the test.  Use α =0.02
  • Give a conclusion in answer to the question above.

Problem 5:  (5 points) Suppose the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) would like to compare the on-time performances of different airlines on domestic, nonstop flights.  The following table shows three different airlines and the frequency of flights that arrived early, on-time, and late for each.  This is also in the JMP file airline.jmp.

Airline

Status

Southwest

US Airways

Delta

Early

20

24

22

On-time

60

55

50

Late

25

30

14

We want to determine if on-time status and airline are independent of one another.

  • Give the null and alternative hypothesis.
  • In the contingency table output from JMP include count, expected, and cell chi square.
  • Give the P-value and decision of this test.
  • What can we conclude from this significance test? Using α = 0.05.

fixed rate only 5 not more thanks

International Business Essay

Daniels, J. D., Radebaugh, L. H., & Sullivan, D. P. (2015). 
International business: Environments and operations (15th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education.

nswer the following essay questions using a minimum of three sources for each response. Your paper should be at least three pages in length and use APA style guidelines.

You are CEO of ABC Washing Machine Company, and you want to market front load washers and dryers in the Czech Republic. Taking into consideration the mean income for this country is around 20,000 USD, how would you market front load washers/dryers? Your response should include:

ï‚· economic, legal, and political concerns;

ï‚· product differentiation and alteration strategies;

ï‚· marketing mix strategies (price, promotion, and place);

ï‚· explain each of the staffing approaches; and

ï‚· discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each approach and provide examples of each one.

75 words question for health care 7

Discuss the benefits to a health care organization of acquiring and using the 10 necessary decision support tools

ethics unit 7 alternate seminar assignment

Under what circumstances, if any, is it ethically permissible for an employer to punish an employee for behavior outside of work?

●What ethical principles or ideals do you think a company should consider when making decisions about layoffs?