Back to Understand that patterns of association can also be seen in bivariate categorical data — Problem 2 · Task Set 33

Exercises: Two-Way Tables and Association in Categorical Data

Work through each section in order. For relative frequencies, divide a cell by the right total: the grand total for grand-total relative frequencies, the row total for row relative frequencies, and the column total for column relative frequencies. To look for association, compare row relative frequencies across rows - similar percentages suggest no association, and clearly different percentages suggest an association.

Grade 8·23 problems·~35 min·Common Core Math - Grade 8·container·8-sp-a-4
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Fluency Practice

1.

Use the two-way table below. What is the grand-total relative frequency for apartment dwellers who have a dog? (Divide that cell by the grand total of 5050.)

Has DogNo DogTotal
Apartment61420
House24630
Total302050