I hypothesized that families who have a higher income would become less involved with their children and enjoy the activities we provided in a survey for them earlier in the year. In other words, families that had a lower income would participate more and become more involved with their children compared to families who have a higher income.
The way that I would describe this is if we look at the relationship between the parent’s income and the involvement in the activities with their child, it decreases by 0.0572 units for every one unit increase in the parent’s income. By this, we would be able to see that the relationship status between parent’s income and child involvement stood proper with what we had hypothesized. However, our findings were not significant (p = 0.052). The R-squared statistic is 0.005917, meaning that this model explains not even .05% of the variation in the dependent variable (family enjoyment). Following this, it shows that no relationship can be found between the parent’s income and the families involvement.