Sunday, October 7, 2012

PS. ....

When we said we took these in fligor woods that means we were at woodside cemetary... we got a little comfused. so these were took at Woodside Cemetary and some of them at marias house. (:

LEAF COLLECTION ....

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Steps to the experiment

Research     Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, New Mexico, Kansas, North Carolina, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, West Virginia. All of these states only require one plate and the rest require two. Hypothesis     My hypothesis about the license plate experiment is simple. I think there will be more two license plate cars than cars with one at the stores my group goes to. I think this because in Ohio drivers are required to have both front and back plates. On the other hand we might see a few one plate cars because some of the surrounding states only require one, like for example, Kentucky. Prediction     My prediction follows my hypothesis very well. I predict that in the information we collect, there will be slim to no cars that have only one plate. So, therefor the percentage of two plate cars will be extremely high. Experiment  (before)     My group is going to Meijers, Kroger, and Wal-Mart to collect data. While we are there we will look at 100 cars in each parking lot, write down the state the plates are and how many plates it has. Experiment continued (After)      After preforming the experiment we found our hypothesis and prediction were true. Oddly enough there were out of state cars at every store, that only had one plate. However as we said, the percentages of two plates on a car were very high because of the Ohio cars. Conclusion     We conclude that this information would be greatly altered if you were in another state, that perhaps only required one plate. Also another detail in this experiment is the location of the stores. If the stores were located in an area that is by or on state borders, then it could be close to three or four states at once, this means some of the counties would be closest to that store so there may be three or four main states in the lot that have one or two or a mixture of both plates required. Places         Two Plates         One Plate         Total Meijers        98 cars               2 cars               100 Kroger         97 cars               3 cars               100 Wal-Mart    96 cars               4 cars               100

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

License Plate Statistics

Walmart had 96 cars with 2 plates and 4 with one out of 100 total cars.
Kroger had 98 cars with 2 plates and 2 with one out of 100 total cars.
Meijers had 97 cars with 2 plates and 3 with one out of 100 total cars.