How would you print a bar chart that you have just produced in SPSS?

(A) In Output Viewer, click File, Print, select the bar chart and click OK
(B) In Variable Viewer, open bar chart, click File, Print, OK
(C) In Chart Editor, click Descriptive Statistics, Print, OK
(D) In Data Editor, open Graphs dialog box, click Save, OK

To generate a Spearman’s rho test, which set of instructions should you give SPSS?

(A) Analyze; Crosstabs; Descriptive Statistics; Spearman; OK
(B) Graphs; Frequencies; select variables; Spearman; OK
(C) Analyze; Compare Means; Anova table; First layer; Spearman; OK
(D) Analyze; Correlate; Bivariate; select variables; Spearman; OK

When cross-tabulating two variables, it is conventional to:

(A) Represent the independent variable in rows and the dependent variable in columns
(B) Assign both the dependent and independent variables to columns
(C) Represent the dependent variable in rows and the independent variable in columns
(D) Assign both the dependent and independent variables to rows

Why might you tell SPSS to represent the “slices” of a pie chart in different patterns?

(A) Because the program tends to crash if you ask it to use colour
(B) Because the patterns form symbolic visual images of different social groups
(C) In order to make full use of the facilities that SPSS can offer
(D) If you do not have a colour printer, it makes the differences between slices clearer

What does the operation “Recode Into Different Variables” do to the data?

(A) Replaces missing data with some random scores
(B) Reverses the position of the independent and dependent variable on a graph
(C) Redistributes a range of values into a new set of categories and creates a new variable
(D) Represents the data in the form of a pie chart

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