PMC 500 Statistical Reasoning in Education: Correlation
PMC 500 Statistical Reasoning in Education: Correlation
CORRELATION
1 96 90
2 94 87
3 90 84
4 89 81
5 88 80
6 72 70
7 68 65
8 65 60
9 60 58
10 57 53
11 50 48
12 45 40
13 40 38
14 34 30
15 30 25
• What patterns do you find in these data?
• In general,
- students with high Mathematics scores also have high
Physics scores
- students with low Mathematics scores also have low
Physics scores
• These patterns show that there is a correlation between
Mathematics score and Physics score
Scatterplot
• The correlation between Mathematics score and Physics score can be
represented by a scatterplot
• A scatterplot is a visual representation of the relationship between
two variables
• Each point in a scatterplot represents the value for the X and Y
variables for a subject
• Example: A scatterplot of the relationship between Mathematics
score (X) and Physics score (Y)
Ø Creating a scatterplot using SPSS:
1. Positive correlation
2. Negative correlation
3. Zero correlation
1. Positive Correlation
• In other words, a positive correlation between two variables, X and Y,
implies a direct linear relationship between the variables
- X increases in value, Y increases in value
- X decreases in value, Y decreases in value
• Example:
- Time spent studying for a History test and the score earned on
the test
The points in the scatterplot form
a close approximation to a
straight line slanting upward to
the right
Example:
n r = 0.692
n r 2 = 0.6922 = 0.479