Inference from sample statistics and margin of error
Use a sample statistic and margin of error to estimate a plausible interval for the population.
Core Idea
A well-chosen sample tells you something real about the whole population — but never with perfect precision. The margin of error quantifies how far off the sample result might be.
Understanding
Surveying every single person in a population is usually impossible, so researchers measure a sample and use the result to estimate the population value. The sample mean estimates the population mean; the sample proportion estimates the population proportion.
Every estimate comes with uncertainty. The margin of error captures that uncertainty: it gives a range around the sample statistic where the true population value is likely to fall. If a poll finds 62% support with a margin of error of 4%, the true support plausibly lies between 58% and 66%.
Two factors drive the margin of error down: increasing the sample size and decreasing the variability in the data. On the SAT, the most common lever is sample size — larger samples produce smaller margins of error because each additional data point adds information.
SAT questions in this area typically hand you a sample statistic and a margin of error, then ask which population values are plausible. The core skill is forming the interval
Concept Guides
5Use sample mean to estimate population mean.
Use a random sample mean as the best estimate for the population mean.
Use sample proportion to estimate population proportion.
Use a random sample proportion as the best estimate for the population proportion.
Interpret margin of error and form a plausible interval estimate.
Turn a sample statistic and margin of error into a plausible population interval.
Understand that larger sample sizes generally reduce margin of error.
Larger sample sizes generally produce smaller margins of error.
(SAT) Select plausible population values given a sample statistic and margin of error.
Check whether a population value falls inside the statistic ± margin of error interval.