A group of students were asked to select their preferred breakfast drink from among coffee, tea, and orange juice. The results of the survey are shown in the table along with information about whether the students are in high school (HS) or in college (C).


Create a two-way frequency table to organize the data.

Participant Age Group Drink
1 HS Orange Juice
2 HS Tea
3 C Coffee
4 HS Tea
5 C Coffee
6 C Coffee
7 C Orange Juice
8 HS Tea
9 C Tea
10 HS Orange Juice
11 C Tea
12 C Coffee
13 HS Coffee
14 HS Tea
15 HS Orange Juice
16 HS Tea
17 HS Orange Juice
18 C Tea
19 HS Coffee
20 C Coffee
21 C Orange Juice
22 HS Tea
23 C Tea
24 C Orange Juice
25 HS Coffee
26 HS Orange Juice
27 C Coffee
28 HS Orange Juice
29 C Coffee
30 C Coffee

Cannot create frequency table on these posts.

To create a two-way frequency table, we will organize the data by categorizing the participants based on their age group and preferred drink.

First, we create a table with two headers: "Age Group" and "Drink".

Under the "Age Group" column, we list the two categories: "HS" (high school) and "C" (college).

Under the "Drink" column, we list the three categories: "Coffee", "Tea", and "Orange Juice".

We then count the number of participants in each combination of age group and drink, and fill in the table accordingly.

Here is the two-way frequency table:

Coffee | Tea | Orange Juice
---------------------------------------
HS | 3 | 6 | 5
---------------------------------------
C | 5 | 5 | 3
---------------------------------------

Please note that the counts in each cell represent the number of participants in that specific age group and drink combination.

To create a two-way frequency table to organize the data, we need to count the number of observations for each combination of age group and drink.

First, we create a table with the categories "Age Group" and "Drink" as the row and column headers, respectively.

Coffee Tea Orange Juice
HS
C

Next, we go through the given data and count the number of occurrences for each combination.

For "HS" (high school) age group, we have:
- Coffee: 2 occurrences
- Tea: 7 occurrences
- Orange Juice: 5 occurrences

For "C" (college) age group, we have:
- Coffee: 6 occurrences
- Tea: 4 occurrences
- Orange Juice: 3 occurrences

We fill in the table with these counts:

Coffee Tea Orange Juice
HS 2 7 5
C 6 4 3

This is the two-way frequency table that organizes the data based on age group and drink preference.