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11-25-2008, 10:08 AM | #43 (permalink) |
King of the Idiots
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: The free love freeway
Posts: 262
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1.) a. Are you a Musician?Yes
b. What instrument(s) do you play?Drums 2.) What Genre of music do you listen to/play?Rock I play, I listen to lots of stuff 3.) If you play an instrument, at what age did you start playing?10 4.) How would you rate your performance in math classes during high school?pretty bad 5.) What was the last math class you took in high school?Algebra 2 and I got a C I am a 34 year old male
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Your brain has the shell on it. |
11-25-2008, 10:50 AM | #44 (permalink) |
Raptor
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Metro Detroit, MI
Posts: 1,321
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1.) a. Are you a Musician? Yes
b. What instrument(s) do you play? Keyboard, Cello and Vocals 2.) What Genre of music do you listen to/play? I listen to Rock, Metal, Rap, Indie, Electronic, blah blah blah. I play classical, caberet, jazz, and movie scores. 3.) If you play an instrument, at what age did you start playing? Cello from age 11 and keyboard at age 15. 4.) How would you rate your performance in math classes during high school? Poor 5.) What was the last math class you took in high school? Pre-calculus And I am a 20 y/o female.
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So here's to living life miserable.
And here's to all the lonely stories that I've told. Maybe drinking wine will validate my sorrow. Every man needs a muse and mine could be the bottle. |
11-25-2008, 07:08 PM | #47 (permalink) |
Fish in the percolator!
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Hobbit Land NZ
Posts: 2,870
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This survey seems to have an unusual amount of serious cooperation.
1.) a. Are you a Musician? Yeah b. What instrument(s) do you play? Bass, keyboard 2.) What Genre of music do you listen to/play? Anything I can get my grubby mitts on. 3.) If you play an instrument, at what age did you start playing? Started playing keyboard at 8, but stopped for many years and recently picked it up again. 4.) How would you rate your performance in math classes during high school? 9 5.) What was the last math class you took in high school? Maths with Calculus
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11-26-2008, 11:29 AM | #49 (permalink) | |
Juicious Maximus III
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Scabb Island
Posts: 6,525
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Quote:
My comment was regarding this survey - I have an inlking that these questions will in fact not give very reliable data on how music and maths correlate (or don't). .. So if it was my survey, I'd rewrite the questions to account for more variables. The hidden ones! I'll add (jokingly ) that if music and maths really did correlate positively, more people would understand the last two posts I wrote. I've been writing about statistics after all. EDIT : For the OP : I'll give a hint as to how to improve this survey a bit. First of all, I think the approach might be a little off to start with. Try and think like this; what is it you want to show with the data for your survey? What are you investigating? How do you show it? I suggest coming up with a hypothesis. Hypothesis : Musical and math skills correlate (means that skill at music and maths relate to eachother, either positively (hand in hand) or negatively (bad at one makes the other better)) You should also have an alternative hypothesis, like this : Alternative hypothesis : Musical and math skills do not correlate (means your musical skills don't matter when it comes to maths) The point is that evidence in favour of one will disprove the other one. Hypotheses like these are easy to test and get a good answer out of. Before you can start testing, you need to gather data to back up your hypotheses .. And then you need to make a survey that gives you some kind of good data. For example : How many instruments do you play? How many years have you played instrument(s)? On a rating where 1 is lowest and 10 is highest, where do you rank yourself at math skills? Putting some thought into questions is important. I mean, how are you gonna use an answer like "bad" in statistics? Nothing's impossible, but designing better questions may remove the problem completely. Finally, you should watch out for hidden variables. Sex and age are accounted for (very good!), but there could be others. For example, as I mentioned, people who play more instruments may come from more wealthy families (because they can afford them) and if this really is a trend, that could influence your data (if being rich or poor influences skill with maths or music). To account for something like that, you need to make up more questions. How would you describe your family's economic situation as you grew up? You could make a sort of rating, f.ex - 1 = Poor, 2 = lower middle class, 3 = Upper Middle Class, 4 = Higher middle class, 5 = Rich. I know that a question like that might be getting a bit intimate for people answering on a public forum, but just some suggestions to get your thoughts spinning. From the posts here, it seems to me like the question about genres for example is not gonna help you much in a statistical sense. I mean, maybe you could say something like "people who listen to classical music is smarter than people who listen to rock", but I don't think I'd believe in it and frankly .. you should have a pretty large sample size for anything like that. Well, that's it for statistics 101 for now, but feel free to ask questions.
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Something Completely Different Last edited by Guybrush; 11-26-2008 at 12:00 PM. |
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11-26-2008, 11:41 AM | #50 (permalink) |
Groupie
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 14
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ahh I realise, after a closer look
i think it's hard to establish much that's linked to the genre, cos i'm sure there are many math whizs, or math-haters, who listen to lots more other types of music, but maybe isn't on this forum |
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