I don't get it, in my trial I my teacher put in
The Bobs Restaurant Guide awards hats to restaurants to indicate their quality. The more hats, the better the restaurant. This data would be called:
A) Quantitative and discrete
B) Quantitative and continuous
C) Qualitative and unordered
D) Qualitative and ordered
and the answers was D
But in my book it says nothing about qualitative data it only specifies the types of data to be:
Categorical: represented by categories, usually in words or symbols e.g people birthplaces
Quantitative: represented by numbers. 2 types:
1. Discrete: can be counted and are distinct such as the number of computers in the school ( can only be whole numbers like 1,2,3)
2. Continuous: measured on a smooth scale, such as the weight of footballers (can be numbers like 84.54 etc)
Is my book wrong or my teacher wrong?
The Bobs Restaurant Guide awards hats to restaurants to indicate their quality. The more hats, the better the restaurant. This data would be called:
A) Quantitative and discrete
B) Quantitative and continuous
C) Qualitative and unordered
D) Qualitative and ordered
and the answers was D
But in my book it says nothing about qualitative data it only specifies the types of data to be:
Categorical: represented by categories, usually in words or symbols e.g people birthplaces
Quantitative: represented by numbers. 2 types:
1. Discrete: can be counted and are distinct such as the number of computers in the school ( can only be whole numbers like 1,2,3)
2. Continuous: measured on a smooth scale, such as the weight of footballers (can be numbers like 84.54 etc)
Is my book wrong or my teacher wrong?
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