TY - BOOK TI - Statistics in Psychology and Education SN - 8130701367 U1 - 370.15021 PY - 2006/// CY - New Delhi PB - Cosmo Publications N1 - THE FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTION 3BCnON I. The Tabulation op Measures into a Frequency Distribu tion . 1. Measures in General: Continuous and Discrete 2. Classification of Measures in Continuous Series 3. Three Ways of Expressing the Limits of a Step-interval 4. The Meaning of a Single Score in a Continuous Series n. Measures of Central Tendency . 1. The Average, or Arithmetic Mean 2. The Median . 3. The Mode . in. Measures of Variability 1. The Range . 2. The Quartile Deviation, or Q . 3. The Average Deviation, or AD 4. The Standard Deviation, or SD TV. The Short Method of Finding the Average, AD, and SDic) 1. The Calculation of the Average by the Short Method 2. The Calculation of the AD by the Short Method A. The Calculation of the AD from the Average B. The Calculation of the AD from the Median 3. The Calculation of the Standard Deviation by the Short Method 4. The Short Method Applied to Discrete Series V. The Comparison op Groups . 1. The Measurement of Relative Variability 2. The Comparison of Two Groups in Terms of Central Tendency and Variability . 3. The Comparison of Two Groups in Terms of Overlapping VI. The Calculation op the Percentilbs in a Frequency Dis tribution BECriON VTI. When to Use the Different Measures of Central Ten dency AND Variability . VIIL Summary of Formulas for Finding the Measures of Cen tral Tendency and Variabiuty . IX. Illustrative Problems CHAPTER II GRAPHIC METHODS AND THE NORMAL CURVE I. The Graphic Representation of the Frequency Distribu tion 1. The Frequency Polygon . 2. The Histogram or Column Diagram . 3. The Ogive, or Cumulative Frequency Graph . II. Other Uses of Graphical Methods: the Compabattvb Line Graph m. The Normal Probability Curve . . 1. Elementary Principles of Probability . 2. Why the Probability Curve is Employed in Psychological Measurement 3. Important Properties of the Normal Curve 4m' The Measurement of Skewness IV. Some Practical Applications of the Normal Curve . 1. The Construction and Use of Tables X and XI . . . . 2. A Variety of Problems Solved by Means of Tables X and XI 3. The Arrangement of Problems or other Test Items into a Scale in Which the Difficulty of Each Item is ICnown with Reference to Each Other Item as Well as Some Selected Zero Point 4. The Conversion of Judgments by Ilelative Position—or Relative Merit—into