I have a problem. I want to find if there is a statististical significant difference between two g

tiyakexdw4

tiyakexdw4

Answered question

2022-04-06

I have a problem.
I want to find if there is a statististical significant difference between two groups which I have put through a practical test.
The outcome was 1 or 0 (success/fail).
Group 1 was subject to extra training material before the "exam". Group 2 was not.
Each group had one attempt in three different scenarios: easy - medium - hard.
Lets take the medium scenario as example:
The number of participants in each group is 10
Group 1 scored: 7 successes, 3 failures --> success rate 0.70 Group 2 scored: 2 successes, 8 failures --> success rate 0.22
Now what I have done, is try to use the Z-test for two population proportions in an attempt to reject the null hypothesis, buuuuut, I think my sample size is to small for the z-test?
Im not sure what test to use at this point, can anyone give me a clue?
Thanks for reading

Answer & Explanation

Mollie Roberts

Mollie Roberts

Beginner2022-04-07Added 21 answers

Comment continued: Here is output from Minitab statistical software for comparing two proportions. There is a warning message for the approximate normal test. The result for Fisher's exact test is also shown (with larger P-value).
Please look at textbook, class notes, or online for a suitable explanation of Fisher's test. (Because you have shown no work of your own, I have no way to judge your background or what level of explanation to provide.)
Test and CI for Two Proportions
Sample X N Sample p
1 7 10 0.700000
2 2 10 0.200000
Difference = p (1) - p (2)
Estimate for difference: 0.5
95% lower bound for difference: 0.183606
Test for difference = 0 (vs > 0): Z = 2.60 P-Value = 0.005
* NOTE * The normal approximation may be inaccurate for small samples.
Fisher’s exact test: P-Value = 0.035
In case it helps, here is a computation of the Fisher P-value from R statistical software:
sum(dhyper(0:2, 10, 10, 9))
[1] 0.03488926
You have an urn with 10 red balls and 10 white balls, you withdraw 9 balls from the urn without replacement. What is the probability that two or fewer of the 9 balls drawn are red ones?
Sum three terms of the appropriate hypergeometric PDF (or PMF). [Computations by hand are a little tedious, but elementary.] Perhaps see this Q & A or Wikipedia on Fisher's test.

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