) Abstract One-paragraph summary of the major aspects of the SIP that includes: 1) the overall purpose of the inquiry and the research problem(s) you investigated; 2) the basic design of the study; 3) major findings or trends found from your analysis; and 4) a summary of your interpretations and conclusions. Introduction One or two paragraphs introducing and detailing your project topic, how you conducted your inquiry(ies), and the relevance of your project to a well-defined community. Include any national statistics that support the importance of your issue or that you will use as a comparison to your data here. This section should end with a one-sentence purpose statement and your research question(s). Method Several (at least 2-3) paragraphs that contain the details of your study, a description of your research objective(s)/hypothesis(es), type of study, participants, variables measured, and sampling technique. Numerical summaries and graphs of your data should be embedded throughout this section along with descriptions. See Part I: Presentation of Descriptive Statistics Findings Two to three paragraphs addressing inferential analyses and conclusions drawn about specific variables within a well-defined population (make clear null and alternative hypotheses). Identify assumptions made about your population, the sampling distribution of your sample statistic, or any other facet of your investigation, and the limits of your conclusions. Include a P-value and/or a confidence interval as needed and interpret it. Use visuals as necessary. See Part II: Report of Inferential Statistics. Conclusion One paragraph summary regarding the overall meaningfulness of the statistical inquiry and the lessons learned about project development, teamwork, and completion (deadlines). References Cite any sources used to develop background information. Cite any source of national, state, or local statistics used as a null hypothesis. Cite collaborations with groupmates, including generation of numerical summaries and graphs. Appendix Raw data from the experiment or survey study must be included here. In addition, if an online survey was launched, a live link must be provided. Or, if live interviews or simple experiments were conducted, provide details such as dates, times, places, and names of group members involved.