You be saving a lot of "analysis suicides." Hope many view this rather than jumping into conclusion on how abouts of analyzing their data.. You are the G.O.A.T
thank you for the video . please if we have for example in age less than 20 20to 26 more than 27 are we supposed to classify age in this case as ordinal ? thanks in adv
One variable I have asks for year of study. The options are 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and Other. Does having the "Other" option make this nominal? Or is it still ordinal?
Noah Bradley The answer to this question depends on the very nature of your research. It can be ordinal if you intend to do a comparison between variables based on how many years they've spent studying, like "the more the years, the greater the stress students face". Nominal is if you prefer to keep them distant.
GREAT JOB ... Keep it up .. So when we take the statistical mean of the variables' items and then the standardized scores, then the means or standardized scores will be considered as SCALE? am I right ? .. as we run regression on the means/standardized scores
Thank you for the excellent explanation! I have a question if that is alright? Say a questionnaire had asked for your income, but it is numbered e.g. 1 = 0-$20,000, 2 = $20,0001 - $50,000, 3 = $50,000+, would that now be classified as ordinal instead of scale?
One more comment about how well this video is explained. Thank you for bringing some light on these concepts.
You be saving a lot of "analysis suicides." Hope many view this rather than jumping into conclusion on how abouts of analyzing their data..
You are the G.O.A.T
Thanks. Explained well with examples compared to other videos.
Thank you. simple and straight forward. well explained
Thank you so much! This has helped me understand SPSS for my dissertation!
Thanks a Ton! very clear and clever explanation.
This so informative for me. Thank you very much.
My research is thankful for your video!
Thnks alot of this is best explanation i saw
Very well explained!
thank you for the video . please if we have for example in age less than 20 20to 26 more than 27 are we supposed to classify age in this case as ordinal ? thanks in adv
Good one
Thanks so much for this!
thanks for your explanation
One variable I have asks for year of study. The options are 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and Other. Does having the "Other" option make this nominal? Or is it still ordinal?
Noah Bradley The answer to this question depends on the very nature of your research. It can be ordinal if you intend to do a comparison between variables based on how many years they've spent studying, like "the more the years, the greater the stress students face". Nominal is if you prefer to keep them distant.
GREAT JOB ... Keep it up .. So when we take the statistical mean of the variables' items and then the standardized scores, then the means or standardized scores will be considered as SCALE? am I right ? .. as we run regression on the means/standardized scores
right
Thank you...
Thank you for the excellent explanation! I have a question if that is alright? Say a questionnaire had asked for your income, but it is numbered e.g. 1 = 0-$20,000, 2 = $20,0001 - $50,000, 3 = $50,000+, would that now be classified as ordinal instead of scale?
Yes
so clear
please help why the categorical didnt show on the data view? on the top!?
nice
So age itself is scale while age group is ordinal?
gooood!
What will be the type for Employment Status and Income level?
According to the video if the question would be: Are you employed? Than it is a yes/no question which is nominal.
Very well explained thank you because you just saved my ass
is birth order ordinal?
lick-ert lol
This video was made in 2015, back when there were two genders. Those were the days!