Asked by bob
Use the table to answer the question.
This two-way table shows the number of parents with or without a season pass, categorized by children under 10 years old or aged 10-18.
Non- Season Pass Holders Season Pass Holders Total
Parents with Kids Under 10 52 125 177
Parents with Kids from 10–18 50 58 108
Total 102 183 285
At a local amusement park, parents were asked whether they were season pass holders and the ages of their children. The results of the survey are in the table. Which statement describes a correct association for the data?
(1 point)
Responses
The older the children, the more likely it is that a parent has a season pass.
The older the children, the more likely it is that a parent has a season pass.
There is no association between the age of children and whether a parent is a season pass holder.
There is no association between the age of children and whether a parent is a season pass holder.
The majority of non-season pass holders have children under 10.
The majority of non-season pass holders have children under 10.
There is an association between the ages of children and whether a parent is a season pass holder.
There is an association between the ages of children and whether a parent is a season pass holder.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
"There is an association between the ages of children and whether a parent is a season pass holder."
Explanation: 125/177 ≈ 70.6% of parents with kids under 10 are season-pass holders, while 58/108 ≈ 53.7% of parents with kids 10–18 are season-pass holders. Because these proportions differ, age of children is associated with being a season-pass holder.
Explanation: 125/177 ≈ 70.6% of parents with kids under 10 are season-pass holders, while 58/108 ≈ 53.7% of parents with kids 10–18 are season-pass holders. Because these proportions differ, age of children is associated with being a season-pass holder.
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