Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

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Reporting Kruskal- Wallis test in APA

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Decision Based Learning - Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

Transcript of Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

Page 1: Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

Reporting Kruskal-Wallis test in APA

Page 2: Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

In this short tutorial you will see a problem that can be investigated using the Kruskal Wallis Test.

Page 3: Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

In this short tutorial you will see a problem that can be investigated using the Kruskal Wallis Test.

You will then see how the results of the analysis can be reported using APA style.

Page 4: Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

Problem:

A pizza café owner wants to know who eats more slices of pizza: football basketball or soccer players. With this information she will determine how much inventory she needs during football, basketball, and soccer seasons. She asks you to set up a study, collect the data, run the analysis and interpret the results for her. After collecting the data you realize that there are some extreme outliers among basketball players that may skew the results. You determine to run a Kruskal-Wallis test. How would you state the null-hypothesis?

Page 5: Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

Problem:

A pizza café owner wants to know who eats more slices of pizza: football basketball or soccer players.

Page 6: Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

Problem:

A pizza café owner wants to know who eats more slices of pizza: football basketball or soccer players. With this information she will determine how much inventory she needs during football, basketball, and soccer seasons.

Page 7: Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

Problem:

A pizza café owner wants to know who eats more slices of pizza: football basketball or soccer players. With this information she will determine how much inventory she needs during football, basketball, and soccer seasons. She asks you to set up a study, collect the data, run the analysis and interpret the results for her.

Page 8: Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

Problem:

A pizza café owner wants to know who eats more slices of pizza: football basketball or soccer players. With this information she will determine how much inventory she needs during football, basketball, and soccer seasons. She asks you to set up a study, collect the data, run the analysis and interpret the results for her. After collecting the data you realize that there are some extreme outliers among basketball players that may skew the results.

Page 9: Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

Problem:

A pizza café owner wants to know who eats more slices of pizza: football basketball or soccer players. With this information she will determine how much inventory she needs during football, basketball, and soccer seasons. She asks you to set up a study, collect the data, run the analysis and interpret the results for her. After collecting the data you realize that there are some extreme outliers among basketball players that may skew the results. You determine to run a Kruskal-Wallis test.

Page 10: Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

Problem:

A pizza café owner wants to know who eats more slices of pizza: football basketball or soccer players. With this information she will determine how much inventory she needs during football, basketball, and soccer seasons. She asks you to set up a study, collect the data, run the analysis and interpret the results for her. After collecting the data you realize that there are some extreme outliers among basketball players that may skew the results. You determine to run a Kruskal-Wallis test. Report the results using APA format.

Page 11: Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

Here is one general template for reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test:

Page 12: Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

Here is one general template for reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test:

There was a statistically significant difference between the number of pizzas eaten by different player types (H(2) = 8.520, p = 0.014), with a mean rank of 8 for football players, 4 for basketball players and 3 for soccer players.

Page 13: Reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test

Here is one general template for reporting a Kruskal Wallis Test:

There was a statistically significant difference between the number of pizzas eaten by different player types (H(2) = 8.520, p = 0.014), with a mean rank of 8 for football players, 4 for basketball players and 3 for soccer players.

Chi-square value

Significance P value