Skittles Project
Skittles Project
Skittles Project
In part two I took the data from part one and displayed predictions, as well as the qualitative and
quantitative data.
2. Data: Collect data from your own bag and entire class sample.
Counts for
my bag 14 20 21 19 15 89
Counts for
the entire 302 345 295 284 283 1,509
class sample
Actual
Proportions .157 .225 .236 .213 .169 1.00
for my bag
Actual
Proportions
.200 .229 .279 .188 .267 1.00
for the entire
class sample
3. Graphics for Qualitative Data: I used StatCrunch to create a pie chart and a Pareto chart
for the total number of candies of each color in our class data set.
Discussion: The skittle project represents a random sampling method. There is never a set
amount of browns, reds, yellows, purples, etc., in a skittles bag. It’s always completely random.
We’re sampling from the population of the skittles bag.
In part three I took all of my data collected from part one and displayed it using quantitative and
qualitative data.
PART 3: Organizing and Displaying Quantitative Data: Total Candies per Bag
1. Summary statistics: Found using the entire class count data.
Mean number of candies per bag 60.675
Min: 47
Q1: 57
5-number summary for the number of candies per
Med: 59
bag
Q3: 60
Max: 95
In part four I took all of my data analysis from part three and calculated the confidence intervals.
X: 21
N: 89
C-Level: .90
Calculate
I then entered 21 into the X box because that is our population proportion.
Then I entered 89 into N because that is our sample size.
Then I entered .99 into the C-Level because that is our confidence interval.
After that, I hit calculate and this is my result:
(.120, .352)
That means that we are 99% confident that the yellow skittles population proportion lies
between .120 and .352
1. Mean Number of Candies: Construct a 95% confidence interval estimate for the population
mean the number of candies per bag.
To find out the confidence interval, I need to use my calculator. To find out the answer on my
calculator I first entered all the DATA to the L1 category to find the Mean and Standard
Deviation. The data was as follows; 14 Red, 20 Orange, 21 Yellow, 19 Green, and 15 Purple.
Then I went to STAT, TESTS, 8 (TInterval), then went to data and saw that the mean (17.8),
sample size (5), and standard deviation (3.114) were already inputted, so I didn’t have to worry
about that. The only thing I had to worry about was the Confidence Interval. I typed in .95 for
the 95% confidence interval. Then I hit calculate. It looks like this:
X: 17.8
Sx: 3.114
N: 5
C-Level: .99
Calculate
That means that we are 95% confident that the population means will be between 13.933
and 21.667.
Discussion: The purpose of a confidence interval is to see all the ranges of values for our
estimated population parameter instead of a single point or a “point estimate.”Wider or smaller
intervals affect the width of a confidence interval. Increasing the sample size decreases the
width, and decreasing the sample size increases the width of the confidence interval. As one
increases, the other decreases.
Summary: I learned a lot from this Skittles Project. It was fun to see all the data collected and
make sense when I put all the parts together. It was everything we learned in every unit
compiled into one project. It was fun and interesting to see how it all tied together.