Tuesday, January 28, 2020
Voting Choice and Age Research Results
Voting Choice and Age Research Results    Statistics Assessment   Social Research Skills 1  In this assignment you will need a) to answer some general questions about quantitative data analysis and b) to answer some questions using data taken from the 2014 British Social Attitudes Survey. All questions must be answered.  1. The following questions are about measurement     List the different levels a variable may take and describe the properties of the levels.    Nominal level is where the variable only measures differences between cases such as gender. This is because nominal level does not need any ordering among its responses.  Ordinal level is where the variable can be ranked but the differences between categories is not available. An example can be educational achievement.  Interval level are numerical scales in which intervals have the same interpretation throughout, such as temperature, but it is unusual to see this used in social science.  Ratio level is an interval scale with the additional property that its zero position indicates the absence of the quantity being measured, such as income.    List the level of measurement that has been used for each of the variables in the dataset (other than the serial number)? Do not use the level of measurement in the data file. They have all been set to scale.    England, Scotland or Wales?  Nominal  Sex  Nominal  Age  Interval/ratio  Number of children in HH aged 4-15yrs  Interval/ratio  political party identification  Nominal  Better for govt to be formed of one party, or two in coalition?  Ordinal  How many, if any, cars or vans does your household own or have the regular use of?  Ordinal  How many trips did you make by plane during the last 12 months?  ordinal  How many employees do you supervise?  ordinal  How many hours do you normally work a week in your main job  including any paid or unpaid overtime?  Ordinal  Are you now a member of a trade union or staff association?  Ordinal  Do you tend to trust or tend not to trust the police?  ordinal  Respondents religion  nominal  How old were you when you completed your continuous full-time education?  Nominal  How important to always to vote in elections  ordinal  People who want children ought to get married  ordinal  Gay or lesbian couples should have the right to marry one another if they want to  ordinal  There is one law for the rich and one for the poor  ordinal  Left-right scale  ordinal  Libertarian-authoritarian scale  ordinal  Welfarism scale  ordinal  To which of these groups do you consider you belong?  ordinal  How important to help people in the rest of the world who are worse off than yourself:  ordinal    How do variables levels of measurement affect statistical analyses? Give examples.    Knowing the level of measure can help with how to interpret the data from that variable. This also means that the appropriate statistical analysis used on certain values because if the value was nominal then data would not be averaged or use a t-test on the data.  2. You are required to report some descriptive statistics. Report your findings using any charts or tables you think are appropriate.     Report two measures of dispersion and two measures of central tendency of the number of children aged between 4 and 15 living in the respondents households?    Statistics    Number of children in HH aged 4-15yrs dv    N    Valid    2878    Missing    0    Mean    .33    Median    .00    Mode    0    Std. Deviation    .741    Variance    .548    Range    5    Minimum    0    Maximum    5    Measures of central tendency were computed to summarize the data for the number of children in households aged 4-15yrs variable. Measures of dispersion were computed to understand the variability of scores for the number of children in households aged 4-15yrs variable. The following are the results of this analysis; N = 2878, M=0.33, SD=0.741. When you look at the mean, it appears that there is signficant number of children aged 4-15yrs living in households. Also, based on the small standard deviation, it looks like the data is not varied.    What percentage of the sample believe it is better for government to be formed of one party on its own? (report valid percent) à      Better for govt to be formed of one party, or two in coalition?    Frequency    Percent    Valid Percent    Cumulative Percent    Valid    Govt formed by one political party on own    620    21.5    69.5    69.5    Govt formed by two political parties in coalition    272    9.5    30.5    100.0    Total    892    31.0    100.0    Missing    Not applicable    1907    66.3    Dont know    76    2.6    Refused    3    .1    Total    1986    69.0    Total    2878    100.0    69.5% (valid percent) believe it is better for government to be formed of one party on its own.  3. The following questions are about the number of employees respondents supervise .     What is the greatest number of employees a respondent reported supervising?    Statistics    How many employees do you supervise? dv    N    Valid    2776    Missing    102    Maximum    3000    The greatest number of employees who responded to the report of supervising was 3000.    Recode the variable measuring how many employees respondents supervise into the following categories: 0 employees, 1- 10 employees, 11- 100 employees and more than 100 employees. Display the proportions in each category using appropriate tables and charts.    This bar chart shows that over 60% of respondents supervised were 0 employees, over 20% of respondents supervised were 1- 10 employees, near 10% of respondents supervised were 11-100 employees and near 5% of respondents supervised were over 100 employees.    What percentage of respondents who supervise 0 employees agree strongly there is one law for the rich and one for the poor?    25.1% respondents who supervise 0 employees agree strongly there is one law for the rich and one for the poor.  4. The following question are about the age respondents were when they left education and their scores on a welfare scale.     Report the confidence interval of the mean age respondents were when they left continuous full time education. Please give an interpretation of your results.    One-Sample Test    Test Value = 0    t    df    Sig. (2-tailed)    Mean Difference    95% Confidence Interval of the Difference    Lower    Upper    How old were you when you completed your continuous full-time education?    90.416    2864    .000    19.053    18.64    19.47    We can be 95% confident that the mean on how old were you when you completed your continuous full-time education is between 18.64 and 19.47. This is significant due to significant value is less than the alpha value of 0.05, which means we can reject the null hypothesis.    Is respondents mean score on the scale measuring their attitudes to welfare significantly different from 3? Please give an interpretation of your results. à      One-Sample Test    Test Value = 3    t    df    Sig. (2-tailed)    Mean Difference    95% Confidence Interval of the Difference    Lower    Upper    Welfarism scale    -.479    2338    .632    -.0066929    -.034102    .020716    The mean is insignificant when testing at value of 3 so this means we cannot reject or accept the null hypothesis.  5. The following question is about hypothesis testing and statistical significance.     In your own words, define the concept of a sampling distribution.    Sampling distribution is where the possibility of obtaining each likely value of a statistic from a random sample of a population.    In your own words, describe the difference between a p value and an à ¯Ã à ¡Ã ¯Ã¢â ¬Ã  (alpha) value.    The alpha value is the probability of rejecting the null hypothesis when the null hypothesis is true whereas the p value is the probability of obtaining your sample data if the null hypothesis was true.  6. The following questions are about behavioural and attitudinal differences between members of the sample. For each question you must select the appropriate test of significance, report relevant SPSS output and an interpretation of your results.   a) Is respondents trust in the police independent of their race? Which test did you use and was it statistically significant?    Do you tend to trust or tend not to trust the police? * To which of these groups do you consider you belong? Crosstabulation    Count    To which of these groups do you consider you belong?    Total    Black    Asian    White    Do you tend to trust or tend not to trust the police?    Trust it a great deal    6    23    239    268    Tend to trust it    32    48    1124    1204    Tend to distrust it    22    10    246    278    Distrust it greatly    5    1    94    100    Total    65    82    1703    1850    I used the Chi-squared test on the data. You could argue that the data does show that the respondents trust in the police may not be independent of their race, however I do not believe this was statistically significant due to needing a larger sample size to being to prove or disprove this hypothesis.    How does the mean rating respondents give to helping people in the rest of the world who are worse off than you differ by religion? Which test did you use and was it statistically significant?    Ranks    Respondents religion   dv    N    Mean Rank    How important to help people in the rest of the world who are worse off than yourself: [S-C]AC    Church of England/Anglican    286    305.02    Roman Catholic    154    389.22    Other Christian    247    360.93    Total    687    Ranks    How important to help people in the rest of the world who are worse off than yourself: [S-C]AC    N    Mean Rank    Respondents religion   dv    Not at all important    133    227.30    2    135    236.29    3    178    210.96    Total    446    I used the Kruskal Wallis test. You could argue that the data does show religion has a higher mean rank then to how important to help people in the rest of the world who are worse off than yourself. This is not statistically significant as it does prove or reject the null hypothesis.    Describe the association between the numbers of cars and vans people own or have regular use of and the number of trips they can make by plane during the last 12 months? Which test did you use and was it statistically significant?    Correlations    How many, if any, cars or vans does your household own or have the regular use of?    How many trips did you make by plane during the last 12 months?    How many, if any, cars or vans does your household own or have the regular use of?    Pearson Correlation    1    .502**    Sig. (2-tailed)    .000    N    2878    2878    How many trips did you make by plane during the last 12 months?    Pearson Correlation    .502**    1    Sig. (2-tailed)    .000    N    2878    2878    **. Correlation is significant at the 0.01 level (2-tailed).    I used the Pearsons Correlation Coefficient test. It was statistically significant because there is no correlation between the variables.    How does the mean age respondents left full-time education differ across men and women? Which test did you use and was it statistically significant?    How old were you when you completed your continuous full-time education? * Person 1 SEX Crosstabulation    Person 1 SEX    Total    Male    Female    How old were you when you completed your continuous full-time education?    1    1    0    1    4    0    1    1    10    1    0    1    11    2    1    3    12    1    3    4    13    0    4    4    14    67    67    134    15    247    327    574    16    374    438    812    17    86    130    216    18    116    208    324    19    29    48    77    20    31    42    73    21    102    127    229    22    72    87    159    23    36    48    84    24    23    22    45    25    14    8    22    26    13    7    20    27    3    2    5    28    6    1    7    29    2    2    4    30    1    4    5    31    1    1    2    34    1    0    1    35    1    0    1    38    0    1    1    95    0    3    3    96    21    26    47    97    2    4    6    Total    1253    1612    2865    I used the Chi-squared test on the data. There is not much difference males and females in regards to what age they left education so this statistic test was statistically insignificant.  7. The following questions are about modelling the relationship between belief in always voting in elections and respondents age. Please include all relevant SPSS output and interpret your results.   a) Model respondents beliefs about the importance of always voting in elections as a function of their age. What is the expected change in the scores measuring respondents beliefs in the importance of voting with a unit change in their age?    Person 1 age last birthday * How important to always to vote in elections: [S-C]AC Crosstabulation    Count    How important to always to vote in elections: [S-C]AC    Total    Not at all important    2    3    4    5    6    Very important    Person 1 age last birthday    18    2    1    2    2    2    1    3    13    19    1    0    0    1    3    2    5    12    20    1    1    2    2    1    3    2    12    21    2    1    2    2    3    1    2    13    22    2    1    0    1    2    1    7    14    23    4    2    0    0    2    4    4    16    24    2    1    3    5    4    2    0    17    25    1    2    5    1    1    2    6    18    26    3    1    1    2    4    1    4    16    27    1    1    0    4    2    6    8    22    28    3    1    0    4    7    1    9    25    29    1    0    2    1    2    1    6    13    30    1    1    4    4    4    2    5    21    31    2    1    3    2    1    5    7    21    32    2    0    2    2    2    3    6    17    33    2    0    1    1    2    1    7    14    34    0    0    1    3    0    3    7    14    35    1    4    1    2    1    5    15    29    36    1    0    6    2    3    5    12    29    37    1    0    1    2    3    5    6    18    38    1    0    3    1    0    3    13    21    39    1    0    3    4    6    0    9    23    40    1    0    2    3    6    1    8    21    41    3    1    4    7    6    3    12    36    42    4    2    4    6    3    3    14    36    43    1    3    1    4    5    4    14    32    44    1    0    0    3    0    1    8    13    45    1    1    6    1    4    3    12    28    46    4    0    1    3    2    2    14    26    47    2    1    1    0    3    2    14    23    48    2    2    0    3    3    4    8    22    49    3    0    0    3    6    7    10    29    50    2    0    4    1    1    
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