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Name:__________________________________ Grade/Section:______________

Subject: Statistics and Probability Teacher: Krisol L. Tugade Score: ______

Lesson : Quarter 4 Week 8 LAS 2


Activity Title : Interpret Pearson Product-Moment Correlation Coefficient
Learning Target : Calculates the Pearson Sample Correlation Coefficient
Reference(s) : (DepEd-BLR), Department of Education-Bureau of Learning
Resources.
LAS Writer : Carl John V. Arsenal
Pearson Product-Moment Correlation Coefficient
The most common statistical tool in measuring the linear relationship between two random
variables, x and y, is commonly called the Pearson Product-Moment Correlation Coefficient.
This method measures the strength of a linear association between two variables and is
denoted by r, with the formula as follows:
If the value of r is 1, 0 or -1 we interpret it as follows:
Value of r Interpretation
r=1 Perfect positive correlation
r=0 No correlation of zero correlation
r=-1 Perfect negative correlation

The following scale is used to interpret the other values of r.


Correlation Scale
Value of r Interpretation
±0.81 to ±0.99 Very high correlation
±0.61 to ±0.80 High correlation
±0.41 to ±0.60 Moderately high correlation
±0.21 to ±0.40 Low correlation
±0.01 to ±0.20 Negligible correlation

Activity
Identification. Write your answer on the space provided before the number.
________________1. This is the most common statistical tool in determining linear
relationship between the variables x and y.
________________2. This represents the strength of correlation between variables.
________________3. A value of r which indicates that there is no correlation between
the two variables.
________________4. This is the level of correlation when the value of r is 0.5.
________________5. This the value of r with a high correlation.

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