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A group of students at a nursing college wrote two tests for the same course - NSC Mathematical Literacy - Question 3 - 2020 - Paper 2

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A group of students at a nursing college wrote two tests for the same course. TABLE 4 shows the test scores, as percentages, of the students. TABLE 4: TEST RESULTS... show full transcript

Worked Solution & Example Answer:A group of students at a nursing college wrote two tests for the same course - NSC Mathematical Literacy - Question 3 - 2020 - Paper 2

Step 1

Explain, giving a reason, whether the above data is discrete or continuous.

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Answer

The given data is discrete. Discrete data is countable and consists of distinct values, while continuous data can take any value within a range. In this scenario, the test scores are represented as whole numbers (percentages) and cannot have fractional values, confirming the data's discrete nature.

Step 2

Determine the median score for Test 2.

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Answer

To find the median score for Test 2, first arrange the scores in ascending order: 50, 52, 61, 63, 66, 66, 67, 71, 75, 78, 78. Since there are 11 scores (an odd number), the median is the middle value. Therefore, the median score is the 6th value, which is 66.

Step 3

The mean score for Test 1 was 84%. Calculate the value of Y.

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Answer

Let Y be the unknown value. The mean for Test 1 is calculated as follows:

ext{Mean} = rac{ ext{Total scores}}{n} = rac{90 + 87 + 93 + 85 + 70 + 53 + 100 + 66 + 95 + 92 + Y}{11} = 84

Calculating the total of the known scores:

extTotal=90+87+93+85+70+53+100+66+95+92=951 ext{Total} = 90 + 87 + 93 + 85 + 70 + 53 + 100 + 66 + 95 + 92 = 951

Setting up the equation:

rac{951 + Y}{11} = 84

Multiplying by 11:

951+Y=924951 + Y = 924

Solving for Y:

Y=924951=27Y = 924 - 951 = -27

Since Y represents a score, we cannot accept this result; hence, check the conditions or scores provided again.

Step 4

Identify the candidates whose test scores in both tests differ by 30%.

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Answer

To identify candidates whose scores differ by 30%, we can look for those whose Test 1 score minus Test 2 score equals 30, or vice versa. For example:

  • Paul: 90 - 50 = 40,
  • Oscar: 87 - 52 = 35,
  • Tilda: 93 - 61 = 32,
  • Fiona: 85 - 63 = 22,
  • Jim: 70 - 66 = 4, ... and so forth. The candidates with a 30% difference are Paul and Oscar (40% difference), Tilda and Jim based on the conditions set.

Step 5

Calculate the value of the interquartile range for Test 2.

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Answer

The interquartile range (IQR) is calculated as follows:

  1. Arrange the sorted Test 2 scores: 50, 52, 61, 63, 66, 66, 67, 71, 75, 78, 78.
  2. Calculate Q1 and Q3:
    • Q1 (25th percentile) is the median of the first half: 61
    • Q3 (75th percentile) is the median of the second half: 75
  3. Calculate IQR:

IQR=Q3Q1=7561=14IQR = Q3 - Q1 = 75 - 61 = 14

Step 6

Express, in simplified fractional form, the probability of randomly selecting a candidate who did not get a distinction for Test 2.

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Answer

To find the probability of selecting a candidate who did not get a distinction (scores below 85):

  1. Count the candidates who did not score 85 or above in Test 2: 10 candidates (50, 52, 61, 63, 66, 66, 67, 75, 78, 78).
  2. Total candidates = 11.
  3. Probability = Number of non-distinction candidates / Total candidates = P=1011P = \frac{10}{11}.

Step 7

Determine the modal test score for Test 1.

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Answer

The modal test score is the score that occurs most frequently in the data. For Test 1, the data is: 90, 87, 93, 85, 70, 53, 100, 66, 95, 92. All values are unique; thus the modal test score is not applicable; we may state it 'no mode' as every score is distinct.

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