16 May Final Project Milestone One: Purpose and Research Methods
Overview: To evaluate the relevancy and validity of research material, you must be able to identify and interpret key findings as presented in graphs. This short paper will help you practice reading and interpreting graphs.
Prompt: To complete this paper, answer the questions below.
1. Explain why these graphs are histograms by describing the variable on the y axis, units used, what the markings are for, and what is being measured on the x axis. Note that these density population graphs are standing on end, and each one is two graphs side by side (one for males and one for females) sharing the same x axis.
2. Describe the shape, center, and spread of the U.S. population’s age in 1970 and then in 2020.
3. What story does each graph tell you about age distribution in 1970 and 2020?
4. What social, medical, and public health changes have occurred in the last 50 years to explain the difference in the age distribution of the United States?
Rubric
Guidelines for Submission: Submit your paper as a Microsoft Word document with double spacing, 12-point Times New Roman font, and one-inch margins.
References are not required. The point of this paper is to show how well you understand how to read a graph. However, if you do provide information from a published resource, be sure to cite and reference it.
Explain why these graphs are histograms by describing the variable on the y axis, units used, what the markings are for, and what is being measured on the x axis. Note that these density population graphs are standing on end and each one is two graphs side by side (one for males and one for females) sharing the same x axis.
Describe the shape, center, and spread of the U.S. population’s age in 1970 and then in 2020.
What story does each graph tell you about age distribution in 1970 and 2020?
What social, medical, and public health changes have occurred in the last 50 years to explain the difference in the age distribution of the United States?
References are not required. The point of this paper is to show how well you understand how to read a graph. However, if you do provide information from a published resource, be sure to cite and reference it.
