2. Which question is an example of a statistical question?

A . Ask all your friends, " What is your favorite color"?^^^
B. Ask your teacher, What college did you attend?
C. Ask one of your neighbors, How many times did you eat pizza this month?
D. Ask several store clerks, How much does the shirt cost?
Which type of question leads to a particular answer
A honest
B fair
C Friendly ^^^^
D Biased

4. Which of the following is an unbiased way to ask a question about possible vacation destinations?
A Would you like to go to rainy London? ^^^^
B Would you like to go Windy Chicago?
C Would you like to go to sunny Miami?
D Would you like to go to Los Angeles?

Answers for the statistical Questions practice in connexus

1. A variety of answers
2. Ask all of your friends, "what is your favorite color?"
3. Biased
4. Would you like to go to Los Angeles?
5. Boring

Its 100% correct i just completed it and got all the questions right with these answers

Thanks Gemini Kitten! I got a 100%! :D

a biased question is designed to result in a particular answer.

rainy is biased toward do not go there
sunny is biased toward go there.

disagree on all three.

I DO NOT THINK THIS IS RIGHT BUT I AM GOING TO DO IT I GOT IT WRONG THANKS A LOT.

2. The question that is an example of a statistical question is C. Asking one of your neighbors, "How many times did you eat pizza this month?" This question is a statistical question because it involves collecting data and numbers, which can be analyzed statistically.

To determine which question leads to a particular answer, we need to evaluate the given options:

A. "Ask all your friends, 'What is your favorite color'?" This question does not lead to a particular answer as it is subjective and does not involve collecting data.

B. "Ask your teacher, 'What college did you attend'?" This question also does not lead to a particular answer as it is asking for a specific personal experience, not a general data point.

C. "Ask one of your neighbors, 'How many times did you eat pizza this month'?" This question leads to a particular answer as it involves collecting data (the number of times pizza was eaten) and allows for statistical analysis.

D. "Ask several store clerks, 'How much does the shirt cost'?" This question asks for a specific value (the cost of a shirt), but it does not necessarily lead to a particular answer as the price may vary among different stores.

Therefore, the question in option C is the one that leads to a particular answer.

4. The unbiased way to ask a question about possible vacation destinations is option A. "Would you like to go to rainy London?" This question is unbiased because it presents a characteristic of the destination (rainy) without any positive or negative connotation. The other options may be perceived as positive or negative:

B. "Would you like to go Windy Chicago?" - This option presents a negative characteristic (windy) about the destination.

C. "Would you like to go to sunny Miami?" - This option presents a positive characteristic (sunny) about the destination.

D. "Would you like to go to Los Angeles?" - This option presents the destination without any specific characteristic, but it is generally seen as a desirable place to visit, which can introduce some bias.

Therefore, option A is the unbiased way to ask a question about possible vacation destinations.