Question 14 (4 points) A candy company claims that 11% of the jelly beans in its
ID: 2948196 • Letter: Q
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Question 14 (4 points) A candy company claims that 11% of the jelly beans in its spring mix are pink. Suppose that the candies are packaged at random in small bags containing 25 jelly beans. You plan to run a hypothesis test to test that claim using one of the bags of jelly beans as your sample. Is it appropriate to use a Normal model to describe the sampling distribution of the proportion of pink jelly beans and run your hypothesis test? Why or why not? Save aveQuestion 15 (4 points) A survey oreanization drew a simole random sample of 625 households from a citv of 100.000Explanation / Answer
Here, we are given the sample size n = 25 with p = 0.11 as the proportion of pink jelly beans.
np = 25*0.11 = 2.75 < 5,
As the condition here is not followed and np is a very low value term, therefore normal model cannot be used here to describe the distribution of the proportion of pink jelly beans.
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