Experiment Design and Identifying Bias - Algebra 2

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Question

Miko is a psychologist conducting a study about biased grading. She wants to see whether English teachers will give a paper a higher grade if they have just graded a poorly written paper.

Miko recruits 30 teachers for the study and randomly sorts them into two groups. She has the 115 teachers in one group grade a poorly written paper, and the other 15 teachers grade an average paper. Afterward, all 30 teachers are given the same paper to grade. Miko records the grades for this paper.

Is this experiment statistically well designed?

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Answer

Yes, this experiment is statistically well designed. In order to be statistically well designed, an experiment's subjects must be randomly sorted into two groups (experimental and control), everyone in the experimental group gets the experiment, and everyone in the control group does not get the experiment. Miko randomly sorted the teachers. Fifteen of them saw a poor paper (experiment) and fifteen saw an average paper (control). Afterwards, they were all given an identical paper to grade. While we don't know what the quality of that final identical paper was, the quality itself does not matter, but rather, how each of the 30 individuals grade it, and whether those in the experimental group do so differently than those in the control group IS what matters. Because the experiment has an experimental group and a control group, and both groups were randomly chosen, the experiment is statistically well designed.

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