Asked by emily

how are you suppose to understand this stuff?

Answers

Answered by Ms. Sue
Study, study, study!
Practice, practice, practice!
Answered by emily
ok my question is (if you have a stats book its page 101 question 1.i.)
how do you get the answer if the percentile is 30 and you have 41 numbers in your data table and the 30th number is 57 but when you the equation its not the same answer in the back of the book?
Answered by Ms. Sue
We haven't a clue about which stats book you're using. Plus -- most of us don't have multiple stats book here at home.

With 41 numbers, 12.3 is the top of the 30th percentile.
Answered by cougar
its the mario f. triola copyright 2002 issue
now how did you get that?
Answered by Ms. Sue
41 * 0.3 = 12.3
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