Regarding 1 and 2, please read the Posting Guide mentioned at the bottom of
every R-help post. R does not equal statistics... and education about statistics
is way too ambitious to include in this mailing list that is about a tool that
happens to be useful for statisticians.
There are forums online that do cater to statistical methods (e.g. Cross
Validated or many results from a search engine)... but such conversations can be
extensive so as Rolf suggests this is a good time to learn what resources your
educational institutions can provide... online forums may be too limiting when
your questions are so vague.
On February 20, 2024 2:14:58 PM PST, Rolf Turner <rolfturner at
posteo.net> wrote:>
>On Mon, 19 Feb 2024 17:39:23 +0100
>Lisa Hupfer via R-help <r-help at r-project.org> wrote:
>
>> I am writing my master thesis in which I compared two cultures . So
>> for my statistics I need to compare Age,Sex,Culture as well as have a
>> look at the tasks scores .
>>
>> Anyone familiar with this ?
>> I?d love to share my script so you guide me where I did wrong .
>
>(1) This post is far too vague to be appropriate for this list.
>
>(2) You should learn some statistics; probably linear modelling.
>
>(3) You should talk to your thesis advisor.
>
>(4) Please see fortunes::fortune(285).
>
>cheers,
>
>Rolf Turner
>
>
--
Sent from my phone. Please excuse my brevity.