Thesis Visuals

download Thesis Visuals

of 2

description

Visuals

Transcript of Thesis Visuals

  • 1DataThe research question was interested in one topic. Other variables were added into the

    survey to measure other variables that may, or may not have, influenced the results once analyzed in SPSS. The main ideas the survey asked are as follows:

    How often do your parents drink?How often did your older siblings drink?How often do you drink?What is your GPA?How important is your body weight maintenance?

    The project uses these variables to hypothesize the following:(IV=Independent Variable. DV=Dependent Variable)

    1. IV-how often did your parents drink alcohol?DV- what is your GPA?Ho (null)- Students' GPAs are not affected by their parents' drinkingHa(alternative)- Students' whose parents drink heavily will have lower GPAs then students' whose

    parents do not drink heavily.

    2. IV- how often did your older siblings drink?DV- what is your GPA?Ho (null)- There is no difference in GPA between students whose siblings drink and do not drink Ha (alternative)-. Students who have siblings who drink will have a lower GPA then students whose siblings do not drink.

    3. IV- What importance do you place upon health?DV- What is your GPAHo (null)- There is no difference in GPA between students who maintain their health and do not maintain their health.Ha (alternative)- Students who maintain their health are likely to have better GPAs then students who do not maintain a healthy body weight.

    The variable referring to eating habits was split into two groups. The first grouping looked at students who said they had a GPA of 3.5 or less. The second grouping recoded the variable into students with a 3.6 or more grade point average.Analysis

    HypothesizesODDS(B) Exp(B) Sig.

    Ho= Student's GPAs are not affected by their parents' drinking.

    -.383 .682 .6

    Ho= There is no difference in GPA between students whose siblings drink and do not drink

    -.087 1.091 .89

  • Ho= There is no difference among students who maintain a healthy body weight and their GPA using 3.5 GPA as a standard.

    1.504 4.504 .000

    Ho= There is no difference among student who maintain a healthy body weight and their GPA using a 3.6 GPA as a standard.

    -.368 .692 .025

    Frequencies of 171 students.Frequency Percent

    Parents drink 37 23.4

    Parents don't drink 120 75.9

    Older Siblings drink 77 82.8

    Older siblings do not drink 14 8.2

    Students drink 141 87

    Students do not drink 19 11.1

    Some students may not have answered all of the questions. Other students may not have older siblings. The small sample size of 171 University of Central Florida (UCF) students is not sufficient for this type of research. Results

    The first two tests both fail to reject the null hypothesis. There is no relationship between drinking within the family and attitudes towards academia; additionally there is no relationship between siblings drinking and attitudes towards academia. The significance levels imply that the ODDS and the Exp(B) both happened by chance. The research question about body weight became an extra variable that was added into the survey to examine another variable that may impact a student not drinking in order to be healthy. The first test on this variable recoded the GPA into two groups. Students below and above an average of 3.5 and 3.6 GPA.

    Both tests about drinking in the family said to fail to reject the null. This means that there is no relationship between drinking in the family and academic performance. The test about body weight both tested to fail to reject the null. This means that there is a relationship between the two variables. The first test said that students who exercise are likely to have above a GPA of 3.5. Examining students who perform better in school, in the 3.6-4.0 range still have a significant relationship with body maintenance, however, it goes the opposite way. The students who have over a 3.6 GPA tend to exercise less.