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  • Standard Coefficients Calculator
  • Copy variable #1 and #2 into the skewness and kurtosis calculator

Step three

  • Calculate Nonparametric Independent Samples t -test on Data
  • √ Analyze
  • √ Nonparametric Tests
  • √ 2 Independent Samples
  • √ Test Variable would be your Dependent Variable (e.g., test scores)
  • √ Grouping Variable would be your dichotomous Independent Variable

  • √ Define Groups
  • √ Group One is No. 1 and Group Two is No. 2 (or whatever numbers you used to identify each group)
  • Note : Click on view than value labels to find the code for each group.
  • √ Continue
  • √ OK

Step four:

  • Check for Statistical Significance
Test statistics a
Performance IQ(Wechsler Performance Intelligence 3)
Mann-Whitney U 6765.500
Wilcoxon W 44166.500
Z -20.752
Asymp. Sig. (2-tailed) .000
  • a. Grouping Variable:Disability Group Membership
  • Numerical sentence is written as: U = 6765.50, p <.001

Step five:

Write up your statistics

So, how do you "write up" your Research Questions and your Results? Schuler W. Huck (2000) in his seminal book entitled, Reading Statistics and Research, points to the importance of your audience understanding and making sense of your research in written form. Huck further states:

This book is designed to help people decipher what researchers are trying to communicate in the written or oral summaries of their investigations. Here, the goal is simply to distill meaning from the words, symbols, tables, and figures included in the research report. To be competent in this arena, one must not only be able to decipher what's presented but also to "fill in the holes"; this is the case because researchers typically assume that those receiving the research report are familiar with unmentioned details of the research process and statistical treatment of data.

Researchers and Professors John Slate and Ana Rojas-LeBouef understand this critical issue, so often neglected or not addressed by other authors and researchers. They point to the importance of doctoral students "writing up their statistics" in a way that others can understand your reporting and as importantly, interpret the meaning of your significant findings and implications for the preparation and practice of educational leadership. Slate and LeBouef provide you with a model for "writing up your nonparametric independent samples t -test statistics."

Click here to view: Writing Up Your Nonparametric Independent Samples t-test Statistics

References

  • Cohen, J. (1988). Statistical power analysis for the behavioral sciences (2nd ed.) . Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erbaum
  • Hyperstats Online Statistics Textbook. (n.d.) Retrieved from (External Link)
  • Kurtosis. (n.d.). Definition. Retrieved from (External Link)&term_id=326
  • Kurtosis. (n.d.). Definition of normality . Retrieved from (External Link)
  • Onwuegbuzie, A. J.,&Daniel, L. G. (2002). Uses and misuses of the correlation coefficient. Research in the Schools, 9 (1) , 73-90.
  • Skewness. (n.d.) Retrieved from (External Link)&term_id=356
  • Skewness. (n.d.). Definition of normality . Retrieved from (External Link)
  • StatSoft, Inc. (2011). Electronic statistics textbook. Tulsa, OK: StatSoft. WEB: (External Link)

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Source:  OpenStax, Calculating basic statistical procedures in spss: a self-help and practical guide to preparing theses, dissertations, and manuscripts. OpenStax CNX. Apr 28, 2011 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11292/1.6
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