Data from the 2000 U.S. Census show the following distribution of ages for residents of Ohio:
Data from the 2000 U.S. Census show the following distribution of ages for residents of Ohio:Total Households 4,445,773Family households (families) 2,993,023With own children under 18 years 1,409,912Married-couple family 2,285,798With own children under 18 years 996,042Female households, no husband present 536,878With own children under 18 years 323,095Nonfamily households 1,452,750Householder living alone 1,215,614Householder 65 years and over 446,396a. Construct a column chart to visually represent these data.b. Construct a stacked bar chart to display the sub categories where relevant. (Note that you will have to complete additional subcategories, for instance, under Family households, the number of families without children under 18, so that the total of the subcategories equals the major category total. The sum of all categories does not equal the total.)c. Construct a pie chart showing the proportion of households in each category.Ch2-prob 1 p54A community health status survey obtained the following demographic information from the respondents:Age Frequency18-29 29730-45 66146-64 63465+ 369Compute the relative frequency and cumulative relative frequency of the age groups. Also, estimate the average age of the sample of respondents. What assumptions do you have to make to do this?