praxis math
standard deviation
a computed measure of how much scores vary around the mean score (is equal to the square root of the variance)
independent variable
a condition or piece of data in an experiment that can be controlled or changed
dependent variable
a condition or piece of data in an experiment that is controlled or influenced by an outside factor
simple random sampling (SRS)
a type of random sampling where the variables have an equal and unsystematic chance of selection
slope
In algebra, the _________ , or the rate of change, of the line describes both its steepness and its length
Conditional probability
finding the probability of an event occurring based on a previous event already taking place
normal distribution
a bell-shaped curve, describing the spread of a characteristic throughout a population (represented when the majority of the data is found close to the average of the set)
permutation
a method to calculate the number of events occurring where order matters
sample
a part of a population used to describe the whole group
random samples
a sequence of equally distributed variables
Dependent events
events in which the previous attempts affect the outcome of subsequent events
range
found by adding and subtracting the standard deviation from the mean
Combination Formula
nCr = n! / r! * (n - r)! (n represents the total number of items, and r represents the number of items being chosen at a time)
Permutation Formula
nPr = n!/(n-r)! (n represents the number of items to choose from and r represents how many items are being chosen)
variance
the average of each distance from the mean squared (subtract the mean from each measurement then square it ; the square of the standard deviation)
negative correlation
the dependent variables and independent variables in a data set either increase or decrease opposite from one another
positive correlation
the dependent variables and independent variables in a data set increase or decrease together
correlation
the relationship between two sets of variables used to describe or predict information
Causation
when an observed event or action appears to have caused a second event or action