The table in the recording is based on several sources and intended to provide general guidelines, so there isn't a specific citation. If you need to cite a source for how you determined the strength of a correlation you can search the internet for "correlation strength guidelines" and look for a scholarly source in your discipline.
@@chunkit7405 there are a number of "styles" for writing about the results and they vary in how they present the information about the level of significance, so the correct presentation will depend on the style you are using.
I wish I found this 4 hours ago. Doing a project where I have to interpret one of these and I had no idea what I was doing. Thanks a ton!
It is very important and informative for me... Thanks Alot
It was very clear! thanks a lot
;
Great explanation thank you so much!
great presentation
Well explained
good one
what if there is a positive relationship, however the p value is way higher than .005? how can i interpret that in apa 7th
where can i cite the strength table?
The table in the recording is based on several sources and intended to provide general guidelines, so there isn't a specific citation. If you need to cite a source for how you determined the strength of a correlation you can search the internet for "correlation strength guidelines" and look for a scholarly source in your discipline.
@@dralishafrancis tqvm
hi good day, may i know wht is mean by ** in the r value? ty
That indicates the level of significance as noted just under the table in the output
@@dralishafrancis can I just using p
@@chunkit7405 there are a number of "styles" for writing about the results and they vary in how they present the information about the level of significance, so the correct presentation will depend on the style you are using.
@@dralishafrancis alright Ty so much ! 😆