Answer:
There is no significant evidence which shows that there is a difference in the driving ability of students from West University and East University, assuming a significance level 0.1
Step-by-step explanation:
Let p1 be the proportion of West University students who involved in a car accident within the past year
Let p2 be the proportion of East University students who involved in a car accident within the past year
Then
[tex]H_{0}: [/tex]p1=p2
[tex]H_{a}: [/tex]p1≠p2
The formula for the test statistic is given as:
z=[tex]\frac{p1-p2}{\sqrt{\frac{p*(1-p)*(n1+n2)}{n1*n2} } }[/tex] where
Then we have z=[tex]\frac{0.03}{\sqrt{\frac{0.135*0.865*(100+100)}{100*100} } }[/tex] ≈ 0.6208
Since this is a two tailed test, corresponding p-value for the test statistic is ≈ 0.5347.
Assuming significance level 0.1, The result is not significant since 0.5347>0.1. Therefore we fail to reject the null hypothesis at 0.1 significance