I haven't 🐝 to class since school resumed this semester 😂but you have helped me a lot. God bless you 🙏 I have learnt everything here and I'm grateful ❤️
The alpha (known as "level of significance" or "level of error") can never be 2. It can never be a negative number too. it is always a small value far less than 1, but greater than 0. Is that clear please?
Hello please when I went to class yesterday the lecture said type 1 error is more serious then type 2 error… he made example like… if someone is innocent and the person is said to be guilty (type 1) and the person who is I guilty and I said to be innocent ( type 2) so he said type 1 is more serious.. so he said we try to avoid type 1 error or minimize it.
Please regarding the standardised test question number two 50.05 on the video, your final test was 21.3-20 ÷2.1 ÷ √16 you got 2.48 but my calculator says otherwise, perhaps I didn't input it well Can you clarify for me please
@@PhilosMasterClass well I guess I did it wrong cause I got 0.15476 when I did it and when I referred it to yours and input yours too I still got the 0.15476, perhaps my arrangements were bad or?
I haven't 🐝 to class since school resumed this semester 😂but you have helped me a lot. God bless you 🙏
I have learnt everything here and I'm grateful ❤️
Aww😆
I don't know why you haven't been to class.
But please try and be going regularly okay.
All the best.
You made this so simple to understand 😎😎
You made everything so simple. Keep doing what you are doing
Thank you.
God bless you Sir
Amen
Wow!
Thank you
You're welcome
Bro you will be great .Thanks a lot 🙏
Amen
God bless you bro. And you will be great
Amen
@@PhilosMasterClass please I want u to solve a question for me how will I send you? Thanks
Thanks
Welcome
Thank you very much
Any time
Wow, great presentation!👌😄
Thank you Brother.
Philos🎉😊❤
What if the alpha in the question is two
The alpha (known as "level of significance" or "level of error") can never be 2. It can never be a negative number too. it is always a small value far less than 1, but greater than 0.
Is that clear please?
Hello please when I went to class yesterday the lecture said type 1 error is more serious then type 2 error… he made example like… if someone is innocent and the person is said to be guilty (type 1) and the person who is I guilty and I said to be innocent ( type 2) so he said type 1 is more serious.. so he said we try to avoid type 1 error or minimize it.
Thanks for your response. It depends on what you are looking at at that moment please.
You get it ?
I now get it
Please regarding the standardised test question number two 50.05 on the video, your final test was
21.3-20 ÷2.1 ÷ √16 you got 2.48 but my calculator says otherwise, perhaps I didn't input it well
Can you clarify for me please
Calculator should give you something like 2.47619047619, then approximate it to 2 decimal places and that will be 2.48.
@@PhilosMasterClass well I guess I did it wrong cause I got 0.15476 when I did it and when I referred it to yours and input yours too I still got the 0.15476, perhaps my arrangements were bad or?
@@PhilosMasterClass I've got it
At first, I put it all in a fraction
That's why I was getting a different answer
God bless you Sir