<p>so math majors get the highest lsat scors? and criminolgy and prelaw are at the BOTTOM?!</p>
<p>
[quote]
so math majors get the highest lsat scors? and criminolgy and prelaw are at the BOTTOM?!
[/quote]
</p>
<p>The LSAT measures a different kind of intelligence. I am extremely unsurprised at the results Greybeard posted due to the kinds of questions on that test. Similarly, as an engineering grad, let me say that the amount of practice you get in basic math (such as that on the GRE) is tantamount to studying for the GRE for 4 years, hence why I am unsurprised to see engineering majors at the top for GRE scores (and fairly middle of the pack if not lower for verbal). The difficulty ceiling for the quant is MUCH lower than it is for verbal (hence why over 20% of EE's get an 800 on the quant section).</p>
<p>This thread is bound to be a trainwreck of engineers vs. humanities majors because humanities majors are trained to think that there is no ultimate correct answer and engineers think that notion is retarded.</p>
<p>As for Mr. statistics from earlier in the thread, you don't use standard deviations in confidence intervals.</p>
<p>so wouldnt that mean that the math majors are the ones getting into better law schools over the rest</p>
<p>RISD's is quite tiny and short for an art school's catalog( single sheet folded). and it's pretty nice designed too!</p>
<p>"As for Mr. statistics from earlier in the thread, you don't use standard deviations in confidence intervals."</p>
<p>Interesting.....
Confidence</a> Interval for μ, Standard Deviation Known (1 of 3)</p>
<p>Besides- I was stating that 1+ Sd was significant, especially for a test given millions of times, like the GRE. Care to make a cogent argument that it isn't, MR GATECH Engineer?</p>
<p>---Mr Statistics---</p>
<p>
[quote]
"As for Mr. statistics from earlier in the thread, you don't use standard deviations in confidence intervals."</p>
<p>nteresting.....
Confidence Interval for μ, Standard Deviation Known (1 of 3)
[/quote]
</p>
<p>I meant the OTHER Mr. statistics :P. Of course you were correct in calling him wrong for trying to use a standard deviation instead standard error to tell something about confidence in a hypothesis.</p>
<p>O, sorry.......my bad. I hereby make a public apology, no hard feelings for a fellow Gator?</p>
<p>
[quote]
no hard feelings for a fellow Gator?
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Of course not on this, the day after the 2nd national championship win in 3 years!</p>
<p>based on high math SATs but low GPAs</p>
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