R
Ryan
Guest
OK, I'm doing a psychology project, and the teacher never really explained anything very well about surveys.
My group compiled a survey asking ten questions to test the hypothesis that females are more dependent on the internet than males (I know, stupid thing to test).
Now I have all the raw data in a chart, the sum of responses to each question separated by gender. Now what do I do to analyze this data to get a conclusion? I need to be able to determine the mean and mode.
Should I go through each survey (there are 50 completed surveys), and just assign a point value to each question, and come up with a base score for each survey (10 being the lowest score you can get, meaning no dependence, and 50 being completely dependent).
Any ideas?
My group compiled a survey asking ten questions to test the hypothesis that females are more dependent on the internet than males (I know, stupid thing to test).
Now I have all the raw data in a chart, the sum of responses to each question separated by gender. Now what do I do to analyze this data to get a conclusion? I need to be able to determine the mean and mode.
Should I go through each survey (there are 50 completed surveys), and just assign a point value to each question, and come up with a base score for each survey (10 being the lowest score you can get, meaning no dependence, and 50 being completely dependent).
Any ideas?