1.The students will be put into groups. 2.The students will roll a dice to see which team will go...

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Directions 1. The students will be put into groups. 2. The students will roll a dice to see which team will go first. 3. The group will pick a question, and then everyone will work on it with their group. a) If the team who picked the question gets it correct they get to roll the dice to see what color they go to. i. 1 = red ii.2 = purple iii.3 = yellow iv.4 = blue v. 5 = orange vi.6 = green b) If they miss the problem they stay in the same spot, and the other groups can steal the question. Meaning the if the other groups gets the question correct they can roll the dice to see where they get to move 4. After their turn is over the next team draws a question.

Transcript of 1.The students will be put into groups. 2.The students will roll a dice to see which team will go...

Page 1: 1.The students will be put into groups. 2.The students will roll a dice to see which team will go first. 3.The group will pick a question, and then everyone.

Directions1. The students will be put into groups.2. The students will roll a dice to see which team will go first. 3. The group will pick a question, and then everyone will work on it with their group.

a) If the team who picked the question gets it correct they get to roll the dice to see what color they go to.

i. 1 = redii. 2 = purpleiii. 3 = yellowiv. 4 = bluev. 5 = orangevi. 6 = green

b) If they miss the problem they stay in the same spot, and the other groups can steal the question. Meaning the if the other groups gets the question correct they can roll the dice to see where they get to move

4. After their turn is over the next team draws a question.5. If a team lands on a space with a dot on it then they skip a turn.6. The first team to Candy Land wins

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44 48 52 56 60 64 68 72 76 80 84 88 92 96

1) What is the IQR of the data?

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44 48 52 56 60 64 68 72 76 80 84 88 92 96

2) Identify the 1st quartile, 3rd Quartile and the Median of the data.

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3)Find the Mean Absolute Deviation (MAD) of the following data:

77, 48, 65, 80, 71

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4) How many cars get between 15 and 30 miles per gallon?

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Math Social Studies P.E Total

9th 50 18 40 108

10th 22 20 50 92

Total 72 38 90 200

5) What is the probability that a student surveyed is a freshman?

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Math Social Studies P.E Total

9th 50 18 40 108

10th 22 20 50 92

Total 72 38 90 200

6) If a student likes Math, what is the probability that they are a freshman?

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7) Does the situation represent a positive, negative or no

correlation

Number of hours studying for the SAT and your score

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8) Does the situation represent a positive, negative or no

correlation

The distance you drive and the number of stars in the sky

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9)Does the situation represent a positive, negative or no

correlation

The temperature and the length of daylight hours for the day

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10)Tell if the situation is causation

The number of boats on Lake Allatoona and the number of cars on the street

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11) Tell if the situation is causation:

The hours you work and the money you make

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12) Tell if the situation is causation:

The time spent studying and the A on the test

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13) Which class has the greatest range?

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14) Which class has the largest minimum heart rate?

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15) Which class has the smallest lower quartile?

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16) Which of the following graphs has a strong negative correlation?

A

DC

B

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17) The events x and y have a correlation coefficient of . What is the relationship

between x and y?

A. The events have a strong negative linear relationship.

B. The events have a strong positive linear relationship

C. The events have a weak negative linear relationship

D. There is very little or no correlation.

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18) Given the scatter plot, what is the best type of function to represent the

data?A.LinearB.QuadraticC.ExponentialD.No Correlation

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19) Between which of the following variables would you expect there to be a

positive correlation?

A. The outside temperature and the number of layers of clothing a person wears.

B. The number of students at Pebblebrook and the number of cats at the animal shelter

C. The number of cigarettes a person smokes and the person’s life expectancy

D. The number of years spent in school and salary.

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20) Which of the following is one of the 5 values needed to make a box-and whisker

plot?

A. RangeB. 1st QuartileC. ModeD. Interquartile Range

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21)Lauren asked five of her friends how long they practiced shooting free throws and their shooting percentage in the last 5 games. She found a linear

regression equation for the data to be What does the 10.5 mean in the context of this equation?

A. That her friends shot an average of 10.5 free throws a game.

B. That for every hour they practiced, their free throw percentage went up 10.5

C. That they need to practice 10.5 hours a day to increase their free throw percentage.

D. None of these

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Month Chaz Tyr’e

January $250 $250

Februrary $290 $340

March $270 $310

April $240 $300

May $260 $260

June $270 $280

July $280 $270

22) Chaz and Tyr’e each get paid a bonus at the end of each month. This table shows their bonuses:

Who had the greatest Median?

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Month Chaz Tyr’e

January $250 $250

Februrary $290 $340

March $270 $310

April $240 $300

May $260 $260

June $270 $280

July $280 $270

23) Chaz and Tyr’e each get paid a bonus at the end of each month. This table shows their bonuses:

Who had the greatest Range?

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24) Which shark lived longer than any other shark?

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25) About how long did the Basking Shark live?

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26) Which Shark lived about one-third as long as the Dusky Shark?

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27) Tell what kind of Correlation the graph has.

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28) Tell what kind of Correlation the graph has.

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29) Tell what kind of Correlation the graph has.

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30) Describe the type of correlation represented in the graph below.