Respuesta :
To complete the two-way table of row relative frequencies based on the provided data, we need to calculate the proportion of students with growth mindset and fixed mindset separately for those who attended every practice and those who missed at least one practice.
1. Calculate the row relative frequencies for students who attended every practice:
- For growth mindset: 28 students attended every practice out of a total of 28 + 12 = 40 students with growth mindset. So, the row relative frequency for growth mindset would be 28/40 = 0.70.
- For fixed mindset: 12 students attended every practice out of a total of 28 + 12 = 40 students with fixed mindset. So, the row relative frequency for fixed mindset would be 12/40 = 0.30.
2. Calculate the row relative frequencies for students who missed at least one practice:
- For growth mindset: 9 students missed at least one practice out of a total of 9 + 58 = 67 students with growth mindset. So, the row relative frequency for growth mindset would be 9/67 ≈ 0.13 (rounded to the nearest hundredth).
- For fixed mindset: 58 students missed at least one practice out of a total of 9 + 58 = 67 students with fixed mindset. So, the row relative frequency for fixed mindset would be 58/67 ≈ 0.87 (rounded to the nearest hundredth).
Now, fill in the blanks in the two-way table of row relative frequencies:
- For students with growth mindset who attended every practice: 0.70
- For students with fixed mindset who attended every practice: 0.30
- For students with growth mindset who missed at least one practice: 0.13
- For students with fixed mindset who missed at least one practice: 0.87
These row relative frequencies represent the proportions of students in each category based on mindset and attendance at practice.
I hope this helped you, if it did, please mark brainliest; it would help me out a lot, thanks.