Chebyshevs theorem : find k so that at most 10%

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To determine the value of k such that at most 10% of test scores are more than k standard deviations above the mean, the correct interpretation of Chebyshev's theorem is that k must be at least 2.236. This value corresponds to the scenario where 80% of scores fall within 2.236 standard deviations of the mean, leaving 10% in each tail of the distribution. The discussion clarifies that "at most" 10% means that k can be any value greater than 2.236 to ensure compliance with the requirement. The key takeaway is that k represents the threshold above which only 10% of scores lie, confirming the correct application of the theorem. Understanding this concept is essential for accurate statistical analysis.
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the test scores for a large statistics class have an unknown distribution with a mean of 70 and a standard deviation of 10

find k so that at most 10% of the scores are more than k standard deviations above the mean.

I'm a bit confused by the question it self.
does the question means :
1-1/k^2 = 0.1
k = 1.05

or

1-1/k^2 = 0.2
k = 1.12

or

1-1/k^2 = 0.8
k = square root 5 = 2.23

pls help, thanks in advance.
 
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to avoid being flamed for homework type of question, I added my own opinion towards this question. your help is very much appreciated.
 
idioteque said:
to avoid being flamed for homework type of question, I added my own opinion towards this question. your help is very much appreciated.

I misread your question. The minimal value for k given "at most" 10% k SDs above the mean would be 1-1/k^2=0.8 so k=2.236. This assumes your distribution is perfectly symmetrical.
 
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'at most' 10%.

why take the other remaining 80%?
it asked for 'at most' 10%.
doesn't this mean anything not greater than 10%?
if it asked 'at least' 10% then anything greater than 10%
 
idioteque said:
'at most' 10%.

why take the other remaining 80%?m
it asked for 'at most' 10%.
doesn't this mean anything not greater than 10%?
if it asked 'at least' 10% then anything greater than 10%

80% of the test scores are within 2.236 SD of the mean. 10% are at least 2.236 SD above the mean, 10% at least 2.236 SD below the mean. This is the minimal value of k. If you want to be sure that at most 10% are more than k SD above the mean, take any arbitrary value of k greater than 2.236. That's the way I read it anyway.
 
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ok thank you. I got it.
the keyword is above the mean.
the value of k before the last 10% of each side(20%). so 80% is in between the 20%
is how I interpreted it as it is.
correct?
 
idioteque said:
s how I interpreted it as it is.
correct?

Correct.
 
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