- Recognize when a one-sample [latex]z[/latex]-test or a two-sample [latex]z[/latex]-test is needed to answer a research question.
- Complete a two-sample [latex]z[/latex]-test for proportions from hypotheses to conclusions.
Will I get a callback?
Scenario:
In 2004, two University of Chicago economists (Marianne Bertrand and Sendhil Mullainathan) decided to conduct an experiment[1] to test for labor market discrimination.
The investigators created [latex]4,890[/latex] mock identical resumés, which were sent to job placement ads in Chicago and Boston. To gauge market racial discrimination, each resumé was randomly assigned either a commonly-white or commonly-black name. The experimenters then measured the proportion of resumés from each group (white and black) that received callbacks.[2]
We will need to: Write the null and alternative hypotheses, collect the data and check its conditions, assess the evidence (calculate its test statistics, find the p-value, compare p-value with the significance level), and state its conclusion.