When a study was conducted on the demographic makeup of Huge
When a study was conducted on the demographic make-up of HugeCorp, it had been determined that 50% of it\'s employees were women; however, it was also determined that out of 80 employees in upper management, 47 were women. Assuming that HugeCorp only promotes current employees, at the 82% level of confidence, does it seem as though HugeCorp\'s promotion practices are discriminatory (against men or women)?
Solution
Formulating the null and alternatuve hypotheses,
Ho: p = 0.5
Ha: p =/= 0.5
As we see, the hypothesized po = 0.5
Getting the point estimate of p, p^,
p^ = x / n = 0.5875
Getting the standard error of p^, sp,
sp = sqrt[po (1 - po)/n] = 0.055901699
Getting the z statistic,
z = (p^ - po)/sp = 1.565247584
As this is a 2 tailed test, then, getting the p value,
p = 0.117524868
significance level = 0.18
Comparing p and the significance value, we REJECT THE NULL HYPOTHESIS.
Thus, there is significant evidence at 82% confidence that HugeCorp\'s promotion practices are discriminatory. [CONCLUSION]
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Note: an 82% confidence is very unusual. If this is a typo error, please resubmit this question together with the correction. That way we can continue helping you! Thanks!
